A transitional word/phrase for this context?





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Goodman, Jackson, and Fricker are non-contexualist. , the
mainstream epistemology is contextualist.




What transitional word/phrase to put in the blank?



The best I could come with is " on the other hand", but that is for opposite views.



Any suggestion?










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  • While, the mainstream .....
    – user240918
    Nov 6 at 12:45










  • @user240918 Is comma after while required?
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 16:56










  • @no, it is not.
    – user240918
    Nov 6 at 18:04










  • This doesn't need to be a single sentence in the first place. Just make it two sentences. Or use a semicolon instead.
    – Jason Bassford
    Nov 6 at 20:10

















up vote
1
down vote

favorite













Goodman, Jackson, and Fricker are non-contexualist. , the
mainstream epistemology is contextualist.




What transitional word/phrase to put in the blank?



The best I could come with is " on the other hand", but that is for opposite views.



Any suggestion?










share|improve this question
























  • While, the mainstream .....
    – user240918
    Nov 6 at 12:45










  • @user240918 Is comma after while required?
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 16:56










  • @no, it is not.
    – user240918
    Nov 6 at 18:04










  • This doesn't need to be a single sentence in the first place. Just make it two sentences. Or use a semicolon instead.
    – Jason Bassford
    Nov 6 at 20:10













up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite












Goodman, Jackson, and Fricker are non-contexualist. , the
mainstream epistemology is contextualist.




What transitional word/phrase to put in the blank?



The best I could come with is " on the other hand", but that is for opposite views.



Any suggestion?










share|improve this question
















Goodman, Jackson, and Fricker are non-contexualist. , the
mainstream epistemology is contextualist.




What transitional word/phrase to put in the blank?



The best I could come with is " on the other hand", but that is for opposite views.



Any suggestion?







single-word-requests phrase-requests






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 days ago









Dan Bron

25.7k1186120




25.7k1186120










asked Nov 6 at 12:39









Sasan

554932




554932












  • While, the mainstream .....
    – user240918
    Nov 6 at 12:45










  • @user240918 Is comma after while required?
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 16:56










  • @no, it is not.
    – user240918
    Nov 6 at 18:04










  • This doesn't need to be a single sentence in the first place. Just make it two sentences. Or use a semicolon instead.
    – Jason Bassford
    Nov 6 at 20:10


















  • While, the mainstream .....
    – user240918
    Nov 6 at 12:45










  • @user240918 Is comma after while required?
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 16:56










  • @no, it is not.
    – user240918
    Nov 6 at 18:04










  • This doesn't need to be a single sentence in the first place. Just make it two sentences. Or use a semicolon instead.
    – Jason Bassford
    Nov 6 at 20:10
















While, the mainstream .....
– user240918
Nov 6 at 12:45




While, the mainstream .....
– user240918
Nov 6 at 12:45












@user240918 Is comma after while required?
– Sasan
Nov 6 at 16:56




@user240918 Is comma after while required?
– Sasan
Nov 6 at 16:56












@no, it is not.
– user240918
Nov 6 at 18:04




@no, it is not.
– user240918
Nov 6 at 18:04












This doesn't need to be a single sentence in the first place. Just make it two sentences. Or use a semicolon instead.
– Jason Bassford
Nov 6 at 20:10




This doesn't need to be a single sentence in the first place. Just make it two sentences. Or use a semicolon instead.
– Jason Bassford
Nov 6 at 20:10










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
0
down vote













Try "whereas" (or just but, or however)




in contrast or comparison with the fact that.



"you treat the matter lightly, whereas I myself was never more serious"







share|improve this answer





















  • "whereas" and "but" has the meaning of "contrast". But here we do not have "contrasting". It is just about where to find two opposition groups of views.
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 18:05











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1 Answer
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active

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up vote
0
down vote













Try "whereas" (or just but, or however)




in contrast or comparison with the fact that.



"you treat the matter lightly, whereas I myself was never more serious"







share|improve this answer





















  • "whereas" and "but" has the meaning of "contrast". But here we do not have "contrasting". It is just about where to find two opposition groups of views.
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 18:05















up vote
0
down vote













Try "whereas" (or just but, or however)




in contrast or comparison with the fact that.



"you treat the matter lightly, whereas I myself was never more serious"







share|improve this answer





















  • "whereas" and "but" has the meaning of "contrast". But here we do not have "contrasting". It is just about where to find two opposition groups of views.
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 18:05













up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









Try "whereas" (or just but, or however)




in contrast or comparison with the fact that.



"you treat the matter lightly, whereas I myself was never more serious"







share|improve this answer












Try "whereas" (or just but, or however)




in contrast or comparison with the fact that.



"you treat the matter lightly, whereas I myself was never more serious"








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 6 at 17:24









Carly

724111




724111












  • "whereas" and "but" has the meaning of "contrast". But here we do not have "contrasting". It is just about where to find two opposition groups of views.
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 18:05


















  • "whereas" and "but" has the meaning of "contrast". But here we do not have "contrasting". It is just about where to find two opposition groups of views.
    – Sasan
    Nov 6 at 18:05
















"whereas" and "but" has the meaning of "contrast". But here we do not have "contrasting". It is just about where to find two opposition groups of views.
– Sasan
Nov 6 at 18:05




"whereas" and "but" has the meaning of "contrast". But here we do not have "contrasting". It is just about where to find two opposition groups of views.
– Sasan
Nov 6 at 18:05


















 

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