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View/Open
View/Open

... this perspective a relativist viewpoint looks threatening, as if some walls divide the different cultures and mentalities. But the wish to establish a real encounter with the other may result in an underestimation of difference and otherness and, consequently, in a lack of true communication. An ol ...
Process Ontology in Early American Pragmatism, Buddhism, and
Process Ontology in Early American Pragmatism, Buddhism, and

... that nothing lasts forever. Everything is impermanent. There is no eternal substance. All things change. This is essentially an empirical observation that as Ken Inada states, focuses “on the nature of experiential reality” (233). This is no secret, but even though we see change everywhere we look, ...
Powerpoint - History and Philosophy of Science @ UCD
Powerpoint - History and Philosophy of Science @ UCD

... itself, and that this phenomenon, perplexing as we may find it, is a normal and inevitable characteristic of the mental constitution of a being like man on a stage such as the world. His progress is a living growth, not a mechanism: and its instruments are mental acts, not the formulas and contrivan ...
Lean Hog -- February - Iowa State University
Lean Hog -- February - Iowa State University

... previously held beliefs are either false or unfounded. We need, he believes, a firm foundation on which to place our knowledge, to insure that our beliefs will be true. ...
Change for the Better: Conceptual Engineering and the Task of
Change for the Better: Conceptual Engineering and the Task of

... language philosophers—have the requisite resources to clarify what a ‘better’ structure might mean. Section three examines Rorty’s attempt to synthesise themes from Deweyan and Quinean pragmatism in order to give a specifically world-transforming role to intellectuals. I conclude by asking—in the li ...
science
science

... Why is it not possible to derive hypothesis (theory) directly from the data?* (2) – Scientific hypothesis is formulated based on “educated guesses” at the connections between the phenomena under study, at regularities and patterns that might underlie their occurrence. Scientific guesses are complet ...
Synopsis - PhilPapers
Synopsis - PhilPapers

... material nature (mass and/or energy) of all matter in the phenomenal world, a quality that gives matter (a) objective reality and (b) makes it a percept. Scientific method is geared to studying percepts through a percept-perceiver one-to-one relationship. If all objects of knowledge, however, are no ...
lecture1-Science-Knowledge
lecture1-Science-Knowledge

... basic cognitive instrument. All cognition is embodied cognition, in both microorganisms and humans (Gärdenfors, Stuart). In more complex cognitive agents, knowledge is built upon not only reasoning about input information, but also on intentional choices, dependent on value systems stored and organi ...
Moral Doctrines and Moral Theories
Moral Doctrines and Moral Theories

... Divine Command Theory of Ethics: God’s will determines what is right and what is wrong. ► The ethical person is both merciful and ...
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1. The Opening Sentence

... alludes to the reader who ‘thinks for himself’ as his target audience. Kant shares this attitude of ‘epistemic individualism’ with Locke and Descartes. The Message. So, the Prolegomena are for those who are willing seriously to engage with an issue that in effect undermines the traditional philosoph ...
Rene Descartes
Rene Descartes

... that he himself exists. This is the first certainty of the Meditations, the anchor or foundation on which the Cartesian project depends: „this proposition “I am”, “I exist”, whenever I utter it or conceive it in my mind, is necessarily true.‟ The Latin for this discovery, Cogito ergo sum (I am think ...
Actionable Knowledge
Actionable Knowledge

... known as actionable (Argyris, 1996). Actionable propositions are initiated by actors who use them to implement their intentions effectively: examples of such implementation are common in business and management. As Chris Argyris has written, “actionable knowledge is not only relevant to the world of ...
Categorical imperatives - Philosophy 1510 All Sections
Categorical imperatives - Philosophy 1510 All Sections

... understanding, Kant distinguishes two functions of reason: one theoretical, the other practical. Theoretical reasoning is confined to the world of experience, and concludes that human beings, like all phenomena, are governed by cause and effect in the form of the inescapable laws of nature. Practica ...
Bonus Extract
Bonus Extract

... abode, and get the habit of seeing in the dark. When you have acquired the habit, you will see ten thousand times better than the inhabitants of the den, and you will know what the several images are, and what they represent, because you have seen the beautiful and just and good in their truth. And ...
Subjectivity, Objectivity, Intersubjectivity: Phenomenology and
Subjectivity, Objectivity, Intersubjectivity: Phenomenology and

... Husserl says that the primordial sphere is characterised by original givenness, the “alien” sphere by non-original, re-presented givenness: the difference is not temporal, logical, or foundational but lies in the mode of givenness. However, this conception is highly problematic. As I have pointed pu ...
Rene Descartes Handout #1 Historical
Rene Descartes Handout #1 Historical

... that however much evidence I might have for my empirical beliefs, the evidence will always be consistent with the falsity of my belief. Hence, the possibility that I am dreaming entails that I will always have a ground to doubt my a posteriori beliefs. Potential problem for Descartes' dream argumen ...
Chapter 6 Introducing Metaphysics
Chapter 6 Introducing Metaphysics

...  Plato’s cave raises one of the central debates of ...
Descartes` Three Proofs of God
Descartes` Three Proofs of God

... according to which the images that our ideas depict function as the content of our thoughts. As a corollary, he also holds a sort of picture theory of meaning. Thus, he says “ideas are merely modes of thought” (AT 7.40). Today, most philosophers reject this simplistic account of semantics. We have m ...
What is Philosophy?
What is Philosophy?

... Alexander Nehemas A number of philosophers are particularly concerned with teasing out the difference between science and philosophy: Philosophy is thinking hard about the most difficult problems that there are. And you might think scientists do that too, but there’s a certain kind of question whose ...
lecture5 revised
lecture5 revised

... Is this just another kind of rationalism? Is it true that all my beliefs are open to criticism? How do I know I have the best factual knowledge (circular?)? When do I know that I have reached WRE? Can I use WRE to evaluate other societies? Can I use WRE to evaluate past societies? Is society today b ...
The Dominant Islamic Philosophy of Knowledge
The Dominant Islamic Philosophy of Knowledge

... useful to compare the Arab-Islamic culture with the Western culture in order to clarify certain important aspects of the former, especially with regard to the status of beliefs and the conception of the world. The Arab-Islamic culture is a certainty-oriented culture, while the West is uncertainty-or ...
Non-rational human beings, the poverty of philosophy
Non-rational human beings, the poverty of philosophy

... whether you are Will Forrest, a peasant in 1930s Ukraine, or Joseph Stalin, even before you have assigned a moral value to the fact. There is no standard by which this fact can be fit into a narrative that is in any way more objective than any other, and thus it fails on the necessary condition for ...
1 - David Papineau
1 - David Papineau

... relate to specific branches of science, but structure all our thinking about the natural world. This makes it unlikely that any specific empirical data will ever decide between competing theories of these fundamental categories. Their extreme generality gives them room to account for an openended r ...
CH.2 - Home Page of Dr. H Lee Cheek
CH.2 - Home Page of Dr. H Lee Cheek

... its several definitions, logos, of course means "word" and "reason." The mode of questioning which is dialogue is limited by the very material of which it is constructed, words. However, the questions, though composed of words, do not seek the words of which the answer is composed. Words (logoi) ar ...
Faith v. Reason? - John Carroll University
Faith v. Reason? - John Carroll University

... – Aims, objects, or methods are distinct, but dialogue is possible ...
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Rationalism

In epistemology, rationalism is the view that ""regards reason as the chief source and test of knowledge"" or ""any view appealing to reason as a source of knowledge or justification"". More formally, rationalism is defined as a methodology or a theory ""in which the criterion of the truth is not sensory but intellectual and deductive"". Rationalists believe reality has an intrinsically logical structure. Because of this, rationalists argue that certain truths exist and that the intellect can directly grasp these truths. That is to say, rationalists assert that certain rational principles exist in logic, mathematics, ethics, and metaphysics that are so fundamentally true that denying them causes one to fall into contradiction. Rationalists have such a high confidence in reason that empirical proof and physical evidence are unnecessary to ascertain truth – in other words, ""there are significant ways in which our concepts and knowledge are gained independently of sense experience"". Because of this belief, empiricism is one of rationalism's greatest rivals.Different degrees of emphasis on this method or theory lead to a range of rationalist standpoints, from the moderate position ""that reason has precedence over other ways of acquiring knowledge"" to the more extreme position that reason is ""the unique path to knowledge"". Given a pre-modern understanding of reason, rationalism is identical to philosophy, the Socratic life of inquiry, or the zetetic (skeptical) clear interpretation of authority (open to the underlying or essential cause of things as they appear to our sense of certainty). In recent decades, Leo Strauss sought to revive ""Classical Political Rationalism"" as a discipline that understands the task of reasoning, not as foundational, but as maieutic. Rationalism should not be confused with rationality, nor with rationalization.In politics, Rationalism, since the Enlightenment, historically emphasized a ""politics of reason"" centered upon rational choice, utilitarianism, secularism, and irreligion – the latter aspect's antitheism later ameliorated by utilitarian adoption of pluralistic rationalist methods practicable regardless of religious or irreligious ideology.In this regard, the philosopher John Cottingham noted how rationalism, a methodology, became socially conflated with atheism, a worldview: In the past, particularly in the 17th and 18th centuries, the term 'rationalist' was often used to refer to free thinkers of an anti-clerical and anti-religious outlook, and for a time the word acquired a distinctly pejorative force (thus in 1670 Sanderson spoke disparagingly of 'a mere rationalist, that is to say in plain English an atheist of the late edition...'). The use of the label 'rationalist' to characterize a world outlook which has no place for the supernatural is becoming less popular today; terms like 'humanist' or 'materialist' seem largely to have taken its place. But the old usage still survives.
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