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Quine's rejection of the analytic-synthetic distinction

Willard Van Orman Quine argued that the traditional distinction between "analytic" statements (true by virtue of meaning, like "All bachelors are unmarried") and "synthetic" statements (true by how the world is, like "The sky is blue") is problematic. He believed that our knowledge is a web of interconnected beliefs, where meaning and facts influence each other. Because of this, it's impossible to clearly separate what is true just by definitions from what depends on empirical evidence. Quine's view questions the idea that some truths are purely analytical, emphasizing the interconnected nature of language and knowledge.