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a priori

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a priori

(Latin ‘from what comes before’) in logic, an argument that is known to be true, or false, without reference to experience; the converse of a posteriori.

Space, time, reality, and negation exist independently of experience and arguments from these are a priori. Immanuel Kant asserts that we do not derive these concepts from experience, but that through their application we acquire experience. In morality also he declares that the ideas implied in the words ‘good’ and ‘bad’ are innate and imperative in every mind, independently of actual observation. In current usage, the term a priori refers to whatever seems not to derive from experience.


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No one would have guessed a priori that this movement of a middle-aged man's body would cause fish to come out of the sea into his larder, but experience shows that it does, and the middle-aged man therefore continues to go to the City, just as the cat in the cage continues to lift the latch when it has once found it.
We should not A PRIORI have expected it, but it is undoubtedly a fact.
We may trace them in language, in philosophy, in mythology, in poetry, but we cannot argue a priori about them.
 
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