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==Details== [[Alfred Tarski]] explained the role of primitive notions as follows:<ref>[[Alfred Tarski]] (1946) ''Introduction to Logic and the Methodology of the Deductive Sciences'', p. 118, [[Oxford University Press]].</ref> :When we set out to construct a given discipline, we distinguish, first of all, a certain small group of expressions of this discipline that seem to us to be immediately understandable; the expressions in this group we call PRIMITIVE TERMS or UNDEFINED TERMS, and we employ them without explaining their meanings. At the same time we adopt the principle: not to employ any of the other expressions of the discipline under consideration, unless its meaning has first been determined with the help of primitive terms and of such expressions of the discipline whose meanings have been explained previously. The sentence which determines the meaning of a term in this way is called a DEFINITION,... An inevitable regress to primitive notions in the [[theory of knowledge]] was explained by [[Gilbert de B. Robinson]]: :To a non-mathematician it often comes as a surprise that it is impossible to define explicitly all the terms which are used. This is not a superficial problem but lies at the root of all knowledge; it is necessary to begin somewhere, and to make progress one must clearly state those elements and relations which are undefined and those properties which are taken for granted.<ref>[[Gilbert de B. Robinson]] (1959) ''Foundations of Geometry'', 4th ed., p. 8, [[University of Toronto Press]]</ref>
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