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  1. Chapter 6: Political Theory. In one sense, political theory is a subfield of the discipline of political science, existing alongside other branches of political inquiry such as comparative politics, international relations, and American politics. But in another sense, political theory seems quite unique from the other subfields in that it can ...

    • Jay Steinmetz
    • 2019
  2. (An Introduction to) Formal Political Theory. PS 2703, Fall 2007 Professor Jon(athan) Woon. Overview. What is formal theory? Why learn formal theory? Learning goals. Assumptions and expectations. Logic and Proofs. Deduction. The process of drawing valid conclusions from a set of premises using rules of inference. Deduction.

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  4. 3 days ago · political theory. Quick Reference. Critical, systematic reflection about power in its public and private forms, particularly about the claims of government to possess legitimacy and authority; and, more generally, such reflection about the place of politics in social life.

  5. Political Theory. Theory is defined as a set of propositions that is internally consistent and based on a certain set of axioms and assumptions. Theory must be logically derivable in all cases. It must be politically persuasive, especially when it deals with norms. It must be empirically verifiable when it deals with reality.

  6. Dec 19, 2005 · The term ‘proposition’ has a broad use in contemporary philosophy. It is used to refer to some or all of the following: the primary bearers of truth-value, the objects of belief and other “propositional attitudes” (i.e., what is believed, doubted, etc. [ 1] ), the referents of that -clauses, and the meanings of sentences.

  7. is to begin by sketching a Fregean theory of reference, and showing why this theory needs supplementation with a theory of propositions. Frege’s theory of reference began as a theory of logic: it was an attempt to explain the truth-involving relations between sentences in terms of the structural features

  8. An Account of the Nature of Propositions. Here is my account of the nature of propositions: A proposition is a necessary existent that essentially represents things as being a certain way. Chapters 1 (§ IV) and 3 (§ VII) and 5 (§ II) defended the claim that propositions are necessary existents.

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