Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volumes 8-9Department of Archaeology, 1989 - Archaeology |
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Page 108
... argument and evidential incorporation that have always characterised normative philosophies of science - albeit with any pretensions to a privileged access to absolute truth abandoned . Equally , although it is surely correct to develop ...
... argument and evidential incorporation that have always characterised normative philosophies of science - albeit with any pretensions to a privileged access to absolute truth abandoned . Equally , although it is surely correct to develop ...
Page 112
... arguments within a strictly deductive mode ( Salmon 1982 ) . However , the strongest argument against the claims of those who favour a deductive research methodology is that they labour under a mi sapprehension concerning the status of ...
... arguments within a strictly deductive mode ( Salmon 1982 ) . However , the strongest argument against the claims of those who favour a deductive research methodology is that they labour under a mi sapprehension concerning the status of ...
Page 258
... argument of which all non - Binfordian archaeologists seem to be guilty -- are resolved into three . The first is the ad hominem argument , which accuses the person being criticised of bad character or low intelligence , either by ...
... argument of which all non - Binfordian archaeologists seem to be guilty -- are resolved into three . The first is the ad hominem argument , which accuses the person being criticised of bad character or low intelligence , either by ...
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