Re: Armenian, Sumerian, Burushaski, and Turkic languages



On Jun 18, 2:35 am, Darkstar <darkstar...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Jun 18, 12:07 am, Xabi <jser...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:





On Jun 16, 12:05 pm, Darkstar <darkstar...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Jun 16, 9:08 am, Xabi <jser...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Jun 15, 7:13 pm, Darkstar <darkstar...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:

You're proving too much. (Or making too many assumptions). I think
there's a good principle in logic (is it from the Roman law?) that he
who proves too much proves nothing. It can also be restated as a
principle of complimentarity, according to which new theories are
supposed to be in accordance with the old ones to some sufficient
extent. It doesn't actually matter what you say, whether it's wrong or
right, what matters is just whether a new conjecture can be
interpreted as an additional, constructive correction to any former
theories.

Kuhn, T.S. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1962. ISBN 0-226-45808-3

What about it?

It is about what you call "principle of complimentarity". You can have
a look at its theses athttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Structure_of_Scientific_Revolutions


I know who Kuhn is. I just thought you were going to have any special
opinion about it.

Sorry, sometimes I am kinda smart-ass. I had the suspicion that in
Russia (you are from there, aren't you?) he might not be as well known
as in the rest of the world, but I see that it was a wrong
supposition. Feyerabend is another interesting thinker, don't you
think so?

Javi


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