claim
active
claim:the-results-are-more-widely-applicable-similar-results-will-come-from-asking-people-in-other-cultures-to-answer-analogous-questionsThe results are more widely applicable; similar results will come from asking people in other cultures to answer analogous questions.
Universalist claim predicting cross-cultural generality.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Hypotheses (1)
hypothesis
- Predictive statement about cross-cultural replication of housing preference patterns.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Claim about the difficulty of responsiveness verification.
- The speech act theory for programming can be simpler than human models.
- Definition of responsiveness for verification purposes.
- The social implications of this fact are so extensive that people resist acknowledging it.claim0.786Explanation for why such a fundamental fact remains unrecognized.
- Final point suggesting that deep liking connects us with universal reality.
- In the mirror-of-the-self experiments, people from the same culture and even different cultures agree to a significant extent on which objects embody their eternal self.
- Normative claim about how to evaluate AI-generated content, using Deutsche Physik as cautionary analogy
- How can we formally specify and verify that answers to questions are responsive rather than merely truthful?question0.775Core problem requiring logical apparatus beyond simple truth conditions; McCarthy proposes solution using concept notation from McCarthy 1979b.