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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a posteriori knowledge on" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used in philosophical or academic contexts to refer to knowledge that is gained through experience or empirical evidence, as opposed to theoretical or deductive reasoning.
Example: "The study provided a posteriori knowledge on the effects of climate change observed over the last decade."
Alternatives: "empirical knowledge about" or "experience-based knowledge regarding".
Exact(2)
In this paper, the formulation of continuous-discrete Kalman filters and receding horizon observers are extended to include a posteriori knowledge on model parameter uncertainties.
Since this learning tools aim at representing the functional relationship between the environment (through the sensed metrics), the systems parameters and the criteria to satisfy, they need a direct interaction with the environment in order to build a posteriori knowledge on their environment.
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Your knowledge that this product is indeed n which is, of course, necessary is a posteriori; it depends on your a posteriori knowledge that the computer produces the right answers.
In general, learning a conclusion by an argument is a species of a posteriori knowledge just in case at least one premise is known a posteriori.
A posteriori knowledge (denoted by d) is denoted by one distinguished attributed.
To sharpen the question, what difference between our knowledge that P and a clear case of a posteriori knowledge, say our knowledge that something is red based on our current visual experience of a red table, makes the former innate and the latter not innate?
A posteriori knowledge, knowledge derived from experience, as opposed to a priori knowledge.
Since at least the 17th century, a sharp distinction has been drawn between a priori knowledge and a posteriori knowledge.
The problem of knowledge, according to Kant, is to explain how some judgments about the world can be necessarily true and therefore knowable "a priori," or independently of experience (see a posteriori knowledge).
A priori knowledge, in Western philosophy since the time of Immanuel Kant, knowledge that is independent of all particular experiences, as opposed to a posteriori knowledge, which derives from experience.
The differences between sentences that express a priori knowledge and those that express a posteriori knowledge are sometimes described in terms of four additional distinctions: necessary versus contingent, analytic versus synthetic, tautological versus significant, and logical versus factual.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com