#skyc0de
1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
Our volunteers look into many questions every day; sometimes it takes them a little while to answer.
Make it descriptive, including relevant context, but also to the point. This way you improve your chances of getting a more relevant and specific answer.
context pls?
Pls note the above (Latin, formal) a priori is coming from the epistomological concept of having knowledge from logic/intuition and not experience
More information on that here (if you attended a French philosophical talk) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_priori_and_a_posteriori
Hmm Kant 
non pas lui
c'est plato quoi

Bawawawawah
Je t'oriente vers la Cri pure pour la connaissance (en fait, il y a une forme d'a priori, assez complexe puisque c'est une connaissance comme condition, c'est la question du transcendantal entre autres)
Et évidemment, sur la Cri pra, pour la morale qui est pour le coup, du a priori 100%
ptn je l ai oubli´e
je deteste kant
i was rescheduling a time with my french tutor and she said "A priori oui"
but then she just didnt show up to idk
"from a quick look, yes" i assume
like ive just had a look at my calendar and i can do that time
can it be used in that context though
merci
she never arrives in our meetingd
"a priori" is just used when what you're saying is a hearsay or describes what it seems to be rather than something you know for sure, you're not the source of the information
it's very common
"A priori oui" would usually be translated as "seems like it" or smth
gotcha