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Summary Of: Fact

assertion of fact is often forwarded without an implied or express basis of authority... Fact and the scientific method... Fact is also synonymous with... Fact also indicates a... Fact may also indicate findings derived through a... the fact that Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system... the fact that Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system... the fact described by the true statement... may coincide to create the fact that Paris is the capital of France... concept of fact is central to fundamental questions regarding the nature... of fact that may be considered relevant in scientific analysis... Fact and the scientific method... Fact and the scientific method... Fact does not always mean the same thing as truth... Fact is a generally agreed... It is a fact that things stick to the earth... It was once a fact that the planets changed direction from time to time... s methods of fact gathering should be openly examined... the general concept and analysis of fact reflects fundamental principles of... Matters of fact have various formal definitions under common law jurisdictions... generally must clearly state all relevant allegations of fact upon which a claim is based... Fact has a long history of usage in the sense...

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Template:Fact | Federation Against Copyright Theft | | Wiktionary | argued | authority | specific | pedagogy | Rhetorical | Latin | philosophy | epistemology | ontology | objectivity | truth | state of affairs | true | proposition | correspondence theory of truth | objective | Slingshot argument | abstraction | objects | properties | relations | Paris | capital city | France | negative | modal | disjunctive | moral | fact-value distinction | Moral philosophers | David Hume | objective | A Treatise of Human Nature | facts and values | G. E. Moore | Naturalistic fallacy | counterfactual conditional | counterfactual conditional | subjunctive | conditional (or "if-then") statement | indicative conditional | Modal logic | Possible world | scientific method | philosophy of science | scientific | scientific reasoning | objective | verifiable | observation | hypothesis | theory | social | natural sciences | history | consensus | confirmation holism | Thomas Kuhn | fossils | radiocarbon dating | Poisson process | Bernoulli process | Percy Williams Bridgman | operationalism | peer review | accreditation | Historiography | cliche | E. H. Carr | objective | perspective | idealistic | citation needed | relativism | transcendent | meta | citation needed | Evidence (law) | Trier of fact | common law | Jurisprudence | pleadings | cause of action | determinations | finder of fact | reversible error | appeal | appellate court | various matters subject to investigation | crime | civil suit | civil procedure | alternative pleading | res judicata | De facto | Reality | State of affairs | Truth | Counterfactual history | Belief | ISBN 0415324955 | ISBN 0773524622 | Davidson | ISBN 019824617x | ISBN 0-19-866132-0 | ISBN 0415122821 | ISBN 1560008512 | Oxford University Press | 16 May | 2007 | legal tradition | civil law | ISBN 157018335X | March 24 | 2006 | April 26 | 2007 | ISBN 0534615244 | Categories | Philosophical concepts | Reality | Epistemology | Units of information (cognitive processes) | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since March 2008 |
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