Dictionary Definition
empiricism
Noun
1 (philosophy) the doctrine that knowledge
derives from experience [syn: empiricist
philosophy, sensationalism]
2 the application of empirical methods in any art
or science
3 medical practice and advice based on
observation and experience in ignorance of scientific findings
[syn: quackery]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
from Greek έμπειρία, experience.Noun
- A pursuit of knowledge purely through
experience,
especially by means of observation and sometimes by
experimentation.
- 1885, Gerard F. Cobb, "Musical Psychics," Proceedings of the
Musical Association, 11th Session, p. 119,
- Our whole life in some of its highest and most important aspects is simply empiricism. Empiricism is only another word for experience.
- 1951 January 1, Albert Einstein, letter to Maurice Solovine, as
published in Letters to Solovine (1993),
- I have found no better expression than "religious" for confidence in the rational nature of reality.... Whenever this feeling is absent, science degenerates into uninspired empiricism.
- 2001, Mark Zimmermann, "The Stillness of Painting: Robert
Kingston and His Contemporaries," PAJ: A Journal of Performance and
Art, vol. 23, no. 3 (Sep), p. 71,
- Painting needs no explanation or apology. This most religious of art forms belies the pathetic empiricisms of contemporary discussions.
- 1885, Gerard F. Cobb, "Musical Psychics," Proceedings of the
Musical Association, 11th Session, p. 119,
- In the context of "medicine|dated": A practice of medicine
founded on mere experience, without the aid
of science or a
knowledge of principles; ignorant and unscientific practice; the
method or practice of an empiric.
- 1990 Alison Klairmont Lingo, "Review of Professional and
Popular Medicine in France, 1770-1830 by Matthew Ramsey," Journal
of Social History, vol. 23, no. 3 (Spring), p. 607,
- Even at the height of its popularity, medical empiricism was the creature of a most unforgiving free market economy. Successful practioners seduced crowds as well as public officials.
- 1990 Alison Klairmont Lingo, "Review of Professional and
Popular Medicine in France, 1770-1830 by Matthew Ramsey," Journal
of Social History, vol. 23, no. 3 (Spring), p. 607,
- A doctrine which
holds that the only or, at
least, the most reliable source of human
knowledge is experience, especially perception by means of the
physical senses. (Often contrasted with
rationalism.)
- 1893 James Seth, "The Truth of Empiricism." The Philosophical
Review, vol. 2, no. 5 (Sep.), p. 552,
- Empiricism teaches us that we are unceasingly and intimately in contact with a full, living, breathing Reality, that experience is a constant communion with the real.
- 1950 Virgil Hinshaw, Jr., "Review of Socratic Method and
Critical Philosophy, Selected Essays by Leonard Nelson," Philosophy
and Phenomenological Research, vol. 11, no. 2 (Dec.), p. 285,
- He agrees with Kant that Hume's empiricism is refuted de facto by the example of mathematics, whose judgments are synthetic a priori.
- 1958 Ernest A. Moody, "Empiricism and Metaphysics in Medieval
Philosophy," The Philosophical Review, vol. 67, no. 2 (Apr.), p.
151,
- Empiricism is the doctrine that human knowledge is grounded on the kind of experience, mostly achieved through the five senses, whose objects are particular events occurring at particular times and in particular places.
- 1893 James Seth, "The Truth of Empiricism." The Philosophical
Review, vol. 2, no. 5 (Sep.), p. 552,
Synonyms
Related terms
Translations
philosophical theory
- Czech: empirismus
References
- Webster 1828}}
Extensive Definition
In philosophy, empiricism means,
roughly, "try it and see". It is a theory of knowledge that is
practical rather than abstract, and asserts that knowledge arises
from experience rather than revelation.
Empiricism is one view held about how we know
things, and so is part of the branch of philosophy called epistemology, which means
"theory of knowledge". Empiricism emphasizes the role of experience and evidence, especially sensory
perception, in the formation of ideas, while discounting the
notion of innate
ideas.
In the philosophy
of science, empiricism emphasizes those aspects of scientific
knowledge that are closely related to evidence, especially as
discovered in experiments. It is a
fundamental part of the scientific
method that all hypotheses and theories must be tested against
observations of the
natural
world, rather than resting solely on a
priori reasoning,
intuition,
or revelation. Hence,
science is considered to be methodologically empirical in
nature.
The term "empiricism" has a dual etymology. It
comes from the Greek word
εμπειρισμός, the Latin translation of which is experientia, from
which we derive the word experience. It also derives from a more
specific classical Greek and Roman usage of empiric, referring to a
physician whose skill derives from practical experience as opposed
to instruction in theory.
Philosophical usage
The term "empirical" was originally used to refer to certain ancient Greek practitioners of medicine who rejected adherence to the dogmatic doctrines of the day, preferring instead to rely on the observation of phenomena as perceived in experience. The doctrine of empiricism was first explicitly formulated by John Locke in the 17th century. Locke argued that the mind is a tabula rasa ("clean slate" or "blank tablet"; Locke used the words "white paper") on which experiences leave their marks. Such empiricism denies that humans have innate ideas or that anything is knowable without reference to experience.It is worth remembering that empiricism does not
hold that we have empirical knowledge automatically. Rather,
according to the empiricist view, for any knowledge to be properly
inferred or deduced, it is to be gained ultimately from one's
sense-based experience. As a historical matter, philosophical
empiricism is commonly contrasted with the philosophical school of
thought known as "rationalism" which, in very
broad terms, asserts that much knowledge is attributable to
reason independently of
the senses. However, this contrast is today considered to be an
extreme oversimplification of the issues involved, because the main
continental rationalists (Descartes,
Spinoza and
Leibniz)
were also advocates of the empirical "scientific method" of their
day. Furthermore, Locke, for his part, held that some knowledge
(e.g. knowledge of God's existence) could be arrived at through
intuition and
reasoning alone.
Some important philosophers commonly associated
with empiricism include
Francis Bacon, Thomas
Hobbes, John Locke,
George
Berkeley, David Hume,
John
Stuart Mill, Gilles
Deleuze and Felix
Guattari.
Scientific usage
A central concept in science and the scientific method is that all evidence must be empirical, or empirically based, that is, dependent on evidence that is observable by the senses. It is differentiated from the philosophic usage of empiricism by the use of the adjective "empirical" or the adverb "empirically". Empirical is used in conjunction with both the natural and social sciences, and refers to the use of working hypotheses that are testable using observation or experiment. In this sense of the word, scientific statements are subject to and derived from our experiences or observations.In a second sense "empirical" in science may be
synonymous with "experimental". In this sense, an empirical result
is an experimental observation. The term semi-empirical is
sometimes used to describe theoretical methods which make use of
basic axioms, established
scientific laws, and previous experimental results in order to
engage in reasoned model building and theoretical inquiry.
History
Early empiricism
Aristotle writes of the unscribed tablet, or tabula rasa in his treatise Περι Ψυχης (De Anima or On the Soul).What the mind thinks must be in it in the same
sense as letters are on a tablet (grammateion) which bears no
actual writing (grammenon); this is just what happens in the case
of the mind. (Aristotle, On the
Soul, 3.4.430a1).
Besides some arguments by the Stoics and Peripatetics,
the Aristotelian notion of the mind as a blank slate went much
unnoticed for more than 1000 years.
In the 11th century, the theory of tabula rasa
was further developed by the Persian
philosopher, Ibn Sina (known as
"Avicenna" in the Western
world). He argued that the "human intellect at birth is rather
like a tabula rasa, a pure potentiality that is actualized through
education and comes to know" and that knowledge is attained through
"empirical familiarity
with objects in this world from which one abstracts universal
concepts" which is developed through a "syllogistic
method of reasoning;
observations lead to prepositional statements, which when
compounded lead to further abstract concepts." He further argued
that the intellect itself "possesses levels of development from the
material intellect (al-‘aql al-hayulani), that potentiality that
can acquire knowledge to the active intellect (al-‘aql al-fa‘il),
the state of the human intellect at conjunction with the perfect
source of knowledge."
In the 12th century, the Andalusian-Arabian
philosopher and novelist Ibn Tufail
(known as "Abubacer" or "Ebn Tophail" in the West) demonstrated the
theory of tabula rasa as a thought
experiment through his Arabic
philosophical novel, Hayy ibn
Yaqdhan, in which he depicted the development of the mind of a
feral
child "from a tabula rasa to that of an adult, in complete
isolation from society" on a desert
island, through experience alone. The
Latin
translation of his philosophical
novel, entitled Philosophus Autodidactus, published by Edward
Pococke the Younger in 1671, had an influence on John Locke's
formulation of tabula rasa in
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. Polish alchemist and philosopher
Michał Sędziwój, who died four years after John Locke was
born, asserted in one of his treatises that "experience is the sole
teacher of truth".
British empiricism
Earlier concepts of the existence of "innate ideas" were the subject of debate between the Continental rationalists and the British empiricists in the 17th century through the late 18th century. John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume were the primary exponents of empiricism.Responding to the continental "rationalism" most
prominently defended by René
Descartes (a type of philosophical approach which should not be
confused with rationalism generally),
John
Locke (1632-1704), writing in the late 17th century, in his
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1689), proposed a very
influential view wherein the only knowledge humans can have is
a
posteriori, i.e., based upon experience. Locke is famously
attributed with holding the proposition that the human mind is a
tabula
rasa, a "blank tablet," in Locke's words "white paper," on
which is written the experiences derived from sense impressions as
a person's life proceeds. There are two sources of our ideas:
sensation and reflection. In both cases, a distinction is made
between simple and complex ideas. The former are unanalysable, and
are broken down into primary and secondary qualities. Complex ideas
are those which combine simple ones and are divided into
substances, modes and relations. According to Locke, our knowledge
of things is a perception of ideas that are in accordance or
discordance with each other, which is very different from the quest
for certainty of
Descartes.
A generation later, the Irish Bishop George
Berkeley (1685-1753) determined that Locke's view immediately
opened a door that would lead to eventual atheism. In response to Locke,
he put forth in his
Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710) a
different, very extreme form of empiricism in which things only
exist either as a result of their being perceived, or by virtue of
the fact that they are an entity doing the perceiving. (For
Berkeley, God fills in for humans by doing the perceiving whenever
humans are not around to do it). In his text Alciphron, Berkeley
maintained that any order humans may see in nature is the language
or handwriting of God. Berkeley's approach to empiricism would
later come to be called subjective
idealism.
The Scottish philosopher David Hume
(1711-1776) added to the empiricist viewpoint an extreme skepticism that he brought to
bear against the accumulated arguments and counterarguments of
Descartes, Locke and Berkeley, among others. Hume argued in keeping
with the empiricist view that all knowledge derives from sense
experience. In particular, he divided all of human knowledge into
two categories: relations of ideas and matters of fact.
Mathematical and logical propositions (e.g. "that the square of the
hypotenuse is equal to the square of the two sides") are examples
of the first, while propositions involving some contingent observation of the
world (e.g. "the sun rises in the East") are examples of the
second. All of people's "ideas", in turn, are derived from their
"impressions". For Hume, an "impression" corresponds roughly with
what we call a sensation. To remember or to imagine such
impressions is to have an "idea". Ideas are therefore the faint
copies of sensations.
Via his skeptical arguments (which became famous
for the tenacity of their logic) he maintained that all knowledge,
even the most basic beliefs about the natural
world, cannot be conclusively established by reason. Rather, he
maintained, our beliefs are more a result of accumulated habits,
developed in response to accumulated sense experiences. Among his
many arguments Hume also added another important slant to the
debate about scientific
method — that of the problem
of induction. Hume argued that it requires inductive reasoning
to arrive at the premises for the principle of inductive reasoning,
and therefore the justification for inductive reasoning is a
circular argument. Among Hume's conclusions regarding the problem
of induction is that there is no certainty that the future will
resemble the past. Thus, as a simple instance posed by Hume, we
cannot know with certainty by inductive
reasoning that the sun will continue to rise in the East, but
instead come to expect it to do so because it has repeatedly done
so in the past.
Hume concluded that such things as belief in an
external world and belief in the existence of the self were not
rationally justifiable. According to Hume these beliefs were to be
accepted nonetheless because of their profound basis in instinct
and custom. Hume's lasting legacy, however, was the doubt that his
skeptical arguments cast on the legitimacy of inductive reasoning,
allowing many skeptics who followed to cast similar doubt.
Phenomenalism
main article Phenomenalism Most of Hume's followers have disagreed with his conclusion that belief in an external world is rationally unjustifiable, contending that Hume's own principles implicitly contained the rational justification for such a belief, that is, beyond being content to let the issue rest on human instinct, custom and habit. According to an extreme empiricist theory known as Phenomenalism, anticipated by the arguments of both Hume and George Berkeley, a physical object is a kind of construction out of our experiences. Phenomenalism is the view that physical objects, properties, events (whatever is physical) are reducible to mental objects, properties, events. Ultimately, only mental objects, properties, events, exist — hence the closely related term subjective idealism. By the phenomenalistic line of thinking, to have a visual experience of a real physical thing is to have an experience which belongs to a certain kind of group of experiences. This type of set of experiences possesses a constancy and coherence that is lacking in the set of experiences of which hallucinations, for example, are a part. As John Stuart Mill put it in the mid-19th century, matter is the "permanent possibility of sensation". Mill's empiricism went a significant step beyond Hume in still another respect: in maintaining that induction is necessary for all meaningful knowledge including mathematics. As summarized by D.W. Hamlin:Mill's empiricism thus held that knowledge of any
kind is not from direct experience but an inductive inference from
direct experience. The problems other philosophers have had with
Mill's position center around the following issues: Firstly, Mill's
formulation encounters difficulty when it describes what direct
experience is by differentiating only between actual and possible
sensations. This misses some key discussion concerning conditions
under which such "groups of permanent possibilities of sensation"
might exist in the first place. Berkeley put God in that gap; the
phenomenalists, including Mill, essentially left the question
unanswered. In the end, lacking an acknowledgement of an aspect of
"reality" that goes beyond mere "possibilities of sensation", such
a position leads to a version of subjective idealism. Questions of
how floor beams continue to support a floor while unobserved, how
trees continue to grow while unobserved and untouched by human
hands, etc, remain unanswered, and perhaps unanswerable in these
terms. Secondly, Mill's formulation leaves open the unsettling
possibility that the "gap-filling entities are purely possibilities
and not actualities at all". Thirdly, Mill's position, by calling
mathematics merely another species of inductive inference,
misapprehends mathematics. It fails to fully consider the structure
and method of mathematical
science, the products of which are arrived at through an
internally consistent deductive
set of procedures which do not, either today or at the time Mill
wrote, fall under the agreed meaning of induction.
The phenomenalist phase of post-Humean empiricism
ended by the 1940s, for by that time it had become obvious that
statements about physical things could not be translated into
statements about actual and possible sense data. If a physical
object statement is to be translatable into a sense-data statement,
the former must be at least deducible from the latter. But it came
to be realized that there is no finite set of statements about
actual and possible sense-data from which we can deduce even a
single physical-object statement. Remember that the translating or
paraphrasing statement must be couched in terms of normal observers
in normal conditions of observation. There is, however, no finite
set of statements that are couched in purely sensory terms and
which can express the satisfaction of the condition of the presence
of a normal observer. According to phenomenalism, to say that a
normal observer is present is to make the hypothetical statement
that were a doctor to inspect the observer, the observer would
appear to the doctor to be normal. But, of course, the doctor
himself must be a normal observer. If we are to specify this
doctor's normality in sensory terms, we must make reference to a
second doctor who, when inspecting the sense organs of the first
doctor, would himself have to have the sense data a normal observer
has when inspecting the sense organs of a subject who is a normal
observer. And if we are to specify in sensory terms that the second
doctor is a normal observer, we must refer to a third doctor, and
so on (also see the third
man).
Logical empiricism
Logical empiricism (aka logical positivism or neopositivism) was an early 20th century attempt to synthesize the essential ideas of British empiricism (e.g. a strong emphasis on sensory experience as the basis for knowledge) with certain insights from mathematical logic that had been developed by Gottlob Frege and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Some of the key figures in this movement were Otto Neurath, Moritz Schlick and the rest of the Vienna Circle, along with A.J. Ayer, Rudolf Carnap and Hans Reichenbach.The neopositivists subscribed to a notion of
philosophy as the conceptual clarification of the methods, insights
and discoveries of the sciences. They saw in the logical symbolism
elaborated by Frege (d. 1925) and Bertrand
Russell (1872-1970) a powerful instrument which could be used
to rationally reconstruct all scientific discourse into an ideal,
logically perfect, language which would be free of the ambiguities
and deformations of natural language. This gave rise to what they
saw as metaphysical pseudoproblems and other conceptual confusions.
By combining Frege's thesis that all mathematical truths are
logical with the early Wittgenstein's idea that all logical truths
are mere linguistic tautologies, they arrived at a twofold
classification of all propositions: the analytic (a priori) and the
synthetic (a posteriori). On this basis, they formulated a strong
principle of demarcation between sentences which have sense and
those which do not: the so-called verification
principle. Any sentence which is not purely logical or for
which there is no method of verification was to be considered
devoid of meaning. As a result, most metaphysical, ethical,
aesthetic and other traditional philosophical problems came to be
considered pseudoproblems.
The extreme empiricism of the neopositivists was
expressed, at least before the 1930s, in the idea that any
genuinely synthetic assertion must be reducible to an ultimate
assertion (or set of ultimate assertions) which expresses direct
observations or perceptions. In later years, Carnap and Neurath
abandoned this sort of phenomenalism in favor of a rational
reconstruction of knowledge into the language of an objective
spatio-temporal physics. That is, instead of translating sentences
about physical objects into sense-data, such sentences were to be
translated into so-called protocol sentences, for example, "X at
location Y and at time T observes such and such." The central
theses of logical positivism (verificationism, the
analytic-synthetic distinction, reductionism, etc.) came under
sharp attack after World War 2 by thinkers such as Nelson
Goodman, W.V. Quine,
Hilary
Putnam, Karl Popper,
and Richard
Rorty. By the late 1960s, it had become evident to most
philosophers that the movement had pretty much run its course,
though its influence is still significant among contemporary
analytic
philosophers such as Michael
Dummett and other anti-realists.
Integration of empiricism and rationalism
In the late 19th century and early 20th century
several forms of pragmatic philosophy arose.
The ideas of pragmatism, in its various forms, developed mainly
from discussions that took place while Charles
Sanders Peirce and William
James were both at Harvard in the 1870s. James popularized the
term "pragmatism", giving Peirce full credit for its patrimony, but
Peirce later demurred from the tangents that the movement was
taking, and redubbed what he regarded as the original idea with the
name of "pragmaticism". Along with its
pragmatic theory of truth, this perspective integrates the
basic insights of empirical (experience-based) and rational (concept-based)
thinking.
Charles Peirce (1839–1914) was highly influential
in laying the groundwork for today's empirical scientific
method. Although Peirce severely criticized many elements of
Descartes' peculiar brand of rationalism, he did not reject
rationalism outright. Indeed, he concurred with the main ideas of
rationalism, most importantly the idea that rational concepts can
be meaningful and the idea that rational concepts necessarily go
beyond the data given by empirical observation. In later years he
even emphasized the concept-driven side of the then ongoing debate
between strict empiricism and strict rationalism, in part to
counterbalance the excesses to which some of his cohorts had taken
pragmatism under the "data-driven" strict-empiricist view. Among
Peirce's major contributions was to place inductive
reasoning and deductive
reasoning in a complementary rather than competitive mode, the
latter of which had been the primary trend among the educated since
David Hume wrote a century before. To this, Peirce added the
concept of abductive
reasoning. The combined three forms of reasoning serve as a
primary conceptual foundation for the empirically based scientific
method today. Peirce's approach "presupposes that (1) the objects
of knowledge are real things, (2) the characters (properties) of
real things do not depend on our perceptions of them, and (3)
everyone who has sufficient experience of real things will agree on
the truth about them. According to Peirce's doctrine of fallibilism, the conclusions
of science are always tentative. The rationality of the scientific
method does not depend on the certainty of its conclusions, but on
its self-corrective character: by continued application of the
method science can detect and correct its own mistakes, and thus
eventually lead to the discovery of truth".
In his Harvard "Lectures on Pragmatism" (1903),
Peirce enumerated what he called the "three cotary propositions of
pragmatism" (L: cos, cotis
whetstone), saying that they "put the edge on the maxim of
pragmatism". First among these he listed the
peripatetic-thomist observation mentioned above, but he further
observed that this link between sensory perception and intellectual
conception is a two-way street. That is, it can be taken to say
that whatever we find in the intellect is also incipiently in the
senses. Hence, if theories are theory-laden then so are the senses,
and perception itself can be seen as a species of abductive
inference, its difference being that it is beyond control and
hence beyond critique — in a word, incorrigible. This in no way
conflicts with the fallibility and revisability of scientific
concepts, since it is only the immediate percept in its unique
individuality or "thisness" — what the Scholastics
called its haecceity —
that stands beyond control and correction. Scientific concepts, on
the other hand, are general in nature, and transient sensations do
in another sense find correction within them. This notion of
perception as abduction has received periodic revivals in artificial
intelligence and cognitive
science research, most recently for instance with the work of
Irvin
Rock on indirect
perception.
Around the beginning of the 20th century, William
James (1842-1910) coined the term "radical empiricism" to describe
an offshoot of his form of pragmatism, which he argued could be
dealt with separately from his pragmatism - though in fact the two
concepts are intertwined in James's published lectures. James
maintained that the empirically observed "directly apprehended
universe, requires no extraneous trans-empirical connective
support", by which he meant to rule out the perception that there
can be any value added
by seeking supernatural explanations
for natural phenomena. James's "radical
empricism" is thus not radical in the context of the term
"empiricism", but is instead fairly consistent with the modern use
of the term "empirical". (His method of
argument in arriving at this view, however, still readily
encounters debate within philosophy even today.) John Dewey
(1859-1952) modified James' pragmatism to form a theory known as
instrumentalism.
The role of sense experience in Dewey's theory is crucial, in that
he saw experience as unified totality of things through which
everything else is interrelated. Dewey's basic thought, in
accordance with empiricism was that reality is determined by past
experience. Therefore, humans adapt their past experiences of
things to perform experiments upon and test the pragmatic values of
such experience. The value of such experience is measured by
scientific instruments, and the results of such measurements
generate ideas which serve as instruments for future
experimentation. Thus, ideas in Dewey's system retain their
empiricist flavour in that they are only known a posteriori.
Footnotes
References
- Achinstein, Peter, and Barker, Stephen F. (1969), The Legacy of Logical Positivism: Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD.
- Aristotle, "On the Soul" (De Anima), W. S. Hett (trans.), pp. 1–203 in Aristotle, Volume 8, Loeb Classical Library, William Heinemann, London, UK, 1936.
- Aristotle, Posterior Analytics.
- Barone, Francesco (1986), Il neopositivismo logico, Laterza, Roma Bari.
- Berlin, Isaiah (2004), The Refutation of Phenomenalism, Isaiah Berlin Virtual Library.
- Bolender, John (1998), "Factual Phenomenalism: A Supervenience Theory"', SORITES, no. 9, pp. 16–31.
- Chisolm, R. (1948), "The Problem of Empiricism", Journal of Philosophy 45, 512–517.
- Dewey, John (1906), Studies in Logical Theory.
- Encyclopedia Britannica, "Empiricism", vol. 4, p. 480.
- Hume, D., A Treatise of Human Nature, L.A. Selby-Bigge (ed.), Oxford University Press, London, UK, 1975.
- Hume, D. "An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding", in Enquiries Concerning the Human Understanding and Concerning the Principles of Morals, 2nd edition, L.A. Selby-Bigge (ed.), Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 1902.
- James, William (1911), The Meaning of Truth.
- Keeton, Morris T. (1962), "Empiricism", pp. 89–90 in Dagobert D. Runes (ed.), Dictionary of Philosophy, Littlefield, Adams, and Company, Totowa, NJ.
- Leftow, Brian (ed., 2006), Aquinas: Summa Theologiae, Questions on God, pp. vii et seq.
- Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1969), "Development of Aristotle's Thought", vol. 1, p. 153ff.
- Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1969), "George Berkeley", vol. 1, p. 297.
- Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1969), "Empiricism", vol. 2, p. 503.
- Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1969), "Mathematics, Foundations of", vol. 5, p, 188–189.
- Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1969), "Axiomatic Method", vol. 5, p. 192ff.
- Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1969), "Epistemological Discussion", subsections on "A Priori Knowledge" and "Axioms".
- Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1969), "Phenomenalism", vol. 6, p. 131.
- Macmillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy (1969), "Thomas Aquinas", subsection on "Theory of Knowledge", vol. 8, pp. 106–107.
- Marconi, D (2004), "Fenomenismo"', in Gianni Vattimo and Gaetano Chiurazzi (eds.), L'Enciclopedia Garzanti di Filosofia, 3rd edition, Garzanti, Milan, Italy.
- Markie, P. (2004), "Rationalism vs. Empiricism" in Edward D. Zalta (ed.), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Eprint.
- Maxwell, Nicholas (1998), The Comprehensibility of the Universe: A New Conception of Science, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
- Mill, J.S., "An Examination of Sir William Rowan Hamilton's Philosophy", in A.J. Ayer and Ramond Winch (eds.), British Empirical Philosophers, Simon and Schuster, New York, NY, 1968.
- Morick, H. (1980), Challenges to Empiricism, Hackett Publishing, Indianapolis, IN.
- Peirce, C.S., "Lectures on Pragmatism", Cambridge, MA, March 26 – May 17, 1903. Reprinted in part, Collected Papers, CP 5.14–212. Reprinted with Introduction and Commentary, Patricia Ann Turisi (ed.), Pragmatism as a Principle and a Method of Right Thinking: The 1903 Harvard "Lectures on Pragmatism", State University of New York Press, Albany, NY, 1997. Reprinted, pp. 133–241, Peirce Edition Project (eds.), The Essential Peirce, Selected Philosophical Writings, Volume 2 (1893–1913), Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN, 1998.
- Rescher, Nicholas (1985), The Heritage of Logical Positivism, University Press of America, Lanham, MD.
- Rock, Irvin (1983), The Logic of Perception, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
- Rock, Irvin, (1997) Indirect Perception, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
- Runes, D.D. (ed., 1962), Dictionary of Philosophy, Littlefield, Adams, and Company, Totowa, NJ.
- Sini, Carlo (2004), "Empirismo", in Gianni Vattimo et al. (eds.), Enciclopedia Garzanti della Filosofia.
- Solomon, Robert C., and Higgins, Kathleen M. (1996), A Short History of Philosophy, pp. 68-74.
- Sorabji, R. (1972), Aristotle on Memory.
- Thornton, Stephen (1987), Berkeley's Theory of Reality, Eprint
- Ward, Teddy (n.d.), "Empiricism", Eprint.
- Wilson, Fred (2005), "John Stuart Mill", in Edward N. Zalta (ed.), Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Eprint.
See also
- Empirical formula
- Empirical knowledge
- Empirical method
- Empirical relationship
- Empirical research
- Empirical validation
- History of scientific method
- Inquiry
- Instrumentalism
- Logical positivism
- Naturalism
- Objectivity
- Phenomenalism
- Pragmatic maxim
- Psychological nativism
- Quasi-empirical method
- Rationalism
- Scientific method
- Two Dogmas of Empiricism
External links
empiricism in Bulgarian: Емпиризъм
empiricism in Catalan: Empirisme
empiricism in Czech: Empirismus
empiricism in Danish: Empiri
empiricism in German: Empirismus
empiricism in Spanish: Empirismo
empiricism in Esperanto: Empiriismo
empiricism in French: Empirisme
empiricism in Korean: 경험론
empiricism in Croatian: Empirizam
empiricism in Indonesian: Empirisme
empiricism in Icelandic: Raunhyggja
empiricism in Italian: Empirismo
empiricism in Hebrew: אמפיריציזם
empiricism in Kurdish: Empîrîzm
empiricism in Lithuanian: Empirizmas
empiricism in Hungarian: Empirizmus
empiricism in Dutch: Empirisme
empiricism in Japanese: 経験論
empiricism in Norwegian: Empiri
empiricism in Norwegian Nynorsk: Empirisme
empiricism in Uzbek: Empirizm
empiricism in Polish: Empiryzm
empiricism in Portuguese: Empirismo
empiricism in Romanian: Empirism
empiricism in Russian: Эмпиризм
empiricism in Slovak: Empirizmus
empiricism in Finnish: Empirismi
empiricism in Swedish: Empiri
empiricism in Tamil: அனுபவவாதம்
empiricism in Vietnamese: Chủ nghĩa kinh
nghiệm
empiricism in Turkish: Deneycilik
empiricism in Ukrainian: Емпіризм
empiricism in Urdu: تجربیت
empiricism in Chinese: 经验主义
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Christian ethics, Marxism, R and D, Stoicism, altruistic ethics,
animalism, aretaics, atomism, behaviorism, casuistry, categorical
imperative, commonsense realism, comparative ethics, control, control experiment,
controlled experiment, cut and try, deontology, dialectical
materialism, earthliness, egoistic
ethics, epiphenomenalism,
ethical formalism, ethical philosophy, ethology, ethonomics, eudaemonics, evolutionism, experiment, experimental
design, experimental method, experimental proof, experimentalism,
experimentation,
golden rule, hedonism,
historical materialism, hit and miss, hylomorphism, hylotheism, hylozoism, intuitionism, materialism, mechanism, moral philosophy,
natural realism, naturalism, new realism,
noble experiment, perfectionism, physicalism, physicism, positive
philosophy, positivism, pragmaticism, pragmatism, realism, representative realism,
research and development, rule of thumb, secularism, situation ethics,
substantialism,
temporality,
tentative method, tentativeness, testing, trial, trial and error, trying, utilitarianism, worldliness