Aristotle’s ‘Essentialism’ and Quine’s Cycling Mathematician

The Monist 52 (2):288-297 (1968)
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Abstract

As Aristotle before him, Quine has earned a just renown for his exposure of untenable dualisms: he is best-known, of course, for his rejection of the ‘dogma’ of the radical distinction between analytic and synthetic truths. But another dualism which Quine has no use for has scarcely caused a murmuring in the assembly of philosophers, where Quine’s opposition to the analytic-synthetic dichotomy placed him on the far left, because on this matter he has aligned himself with the philosophical right, with what has been the establishment since Hume.

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