Quantum redactiones paginae "Examen anatinum" differant

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Linea 1:
[[Fasciculus:Hausente.jpg|thumb|Crocitat ut anas]]
 
'''Examen anatinum'''<ref>''Examen (Angliceanatinum'' est vox a voce Anglica ''duck test'' translata, cuius origo ex [[Iacobus Whitcomb Riley|Iacobo Whitcomb Riley]], poeta [[CFA|Americano]], trahi solet. Dixit enim Riley: "When I see a bird that walks like a duck and swims like a duck and quacks like a duck, I call that bird a duck." Vide, puta, Davis (2007: 7).</ref> est appellatio iocosa huiusmodi ratiocinationis:
 
<blockquote>
Linea 18:
 
At enim res ita se habet, ut singularis quaedam ''a'' ex forma, genere natandi, sonitu agnoscenda sit. Hae proprietates, quas in singulari animadvertimus re, si ex lege generali concludi possunt, inopinatam rem ''a'' fortasse anatem esse agnovimus. Haec ratiocinatio est exemplum generis a [[Carolus Sanders Peirce|Carolo S. Peirce]] excogitati, quod [[ratiocinatio abductiva]] appellatur. Abductio enim, quamquam incerta est, conclusionem valet eo firmare, quod propositionem sive legem generalem atque id quod praesto est testimonium explanare videtur. Ratiocinatione abductiva usi res vita cotidiana inopinatas nobis ipsis explanare solemus.
 
==NotaeNota==
<references/>-->
 
==Bibliographia==
*Davis, Robin S. (2007) ''Who's Sitting on Your Nest Egg? Why You Need a Financial Advisor and Ten Easy Tests for Finding the Best One.'' Bridgeway Books: Austin, TX.
*Gibson, Bill (2003) An essay on late structuralism. ''Development Economics And Structuralist Macroeconomics.'' (Essays in Honor of Lance Taylor, ed. by Amitava Krishna Dutt & Jaime Ros), 52-76. Edward Elgar Publishing: University of Notre Dame.
 
==Vide etiam==
Line 27 ⟶ 34:
* [[Zebra (adagium)|Zebra]]
* [[Duck typing]]
<!--
==Notae==
<references/>-->
 
==Bibliographia==
*Gibson, Bill (2003) An essay on late structuralism. ''Development Economics And Structuralist Macroeconomics.'' (Essays in Honor of Lance Taylor, ed. by Amitava Krishna Dutt & Jaime Ros), 52-76. Edward Elgar Publishing: University of Notre Dame.
 
 
[[Categoria:Epistemologia]]