چکیده:
Strawson’s conception of analysis as a ‘connective linguistic analysis’ makes it possible for him to achieve an indefinitely large range of ideas or concepts among them are certain numbers of fundamental، general and pervasive concepts or concept‐types which not only are pre‐theoretical or ahistorical، but also together constitute a structural framework only within which logic، ontology and epistemology is possible. He takes it as a foundation for this conclusion that logic، ontology and epistemology are three aspects of one unified enquiry (or trio) and strengthens it by this assertion that we can understand this unity through considering the fundamental operation of our language. In this paper، after tracing the line of development of Strawson’s philosophical idea of the trio and specifying the fundamental operation of our language (or the common thread which makes this unity possible)، we stipulate that it is by means of ‘connective linguistic analysis’ that Strawson was able to unify epistemology، ontology and logic.
خلاصه ماشینی:
"Such analysis, in opposition to ‘reductive atomistic analysis’, does not bound itself only to (formal) logical structure of language or logically independent elementary propositions and its simple-unanalyzable names or concepts, but by setting judgment (which is formed by combination of reference and predication) as the most fundamental operation of ordinary speech or ( if we use our analogy) as a single thread running in and through above-mentioned trio, and thereby by asking about the objects of that operation, it makes way for formation of unity between parts of that trio (i.
In this paper, after tracing the line of development of Strawson’s philosophical idea of the trio in his works and specifying the central concern of that trio, we stipulate that it is by means of ‘connective linguistic analysis’ that Strawson managed to unify epistemology, ontology and logic.
This is a basic combination that makes judgments possible and we can recognize it in current logic or ordinary speech as the combination of subject and predicate or reference and predication, in epistemology as the combination of sensibility and understanding, and in ontology as the combination of particular and universal.
It is through this kind of analysis that Strawson confronts an indefinitely large range of ideas or concepts among them are a certain number of fundamental, general and pervasive concepts or concept-types (for example, such concepts as space, time, body, person, object, event, mind, knowledge, truth, meaning, existence, identity, action, intention, causation, explanation, etc."