{"id":232444,"date":"2017-08-04T13:10:18","date_gmt":"2017-08-04T17:10:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/empiricism-philosophy-britannica-com.php"},"modified":"2017-08-04T13:10:18","modified_gmt":"2017-08-04T17:10:18","slug":"empiricism-philosophy-britannica-com","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/rationalism\/empiricism-philosophy-britannica-com.php","title":{"rendered":"empiricism | philosophy | Britannica.com"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Empiricism, in        philosophy, the view that all concepts originate in    experience, that all concepts are about or applicable to things    that can be experienced, or that all rationally acceptable    beliefs or propositions are justifiable or knowable only    through experience. This broad     definition accords with the derivation of the term    empiricism from the ancient Greek word    empeiria, experience.  <\/p>\n<p>    Concepts are said to be a posteriori (Latin: from the    latter) if they can be applied only on the basis of    experience, and they are called a priori (from the former)    if they can be applied independently of experience. Beliefs    or propositions are said to be a posteriori if they are    knowable only on the basis of experience and a priori if they    are knowable independently of experience (see        a posteriori knowledge). Thus, according to the    second and third definitions of empiricism above, empiricism is    the view that all concepts, or all rationally acceptable    beliefs or propositions, are a posteriori rather than a priori.  <\/p>\n<p>    The first two definitions of empiricism typically involve an    implicit    theory of meaning,    according to which words are meaningful only insofar as they    convey concepts. Some empiricists have held that all concepts    are either mental copies of items that are directly    experienced or complex combinations of concepts that are    themselves copies of items that are directly experienced. This    view is closely linked to the notion that the conditions of    application of a concept must always be specified in    experiential terms.  <\/p>\n<p>    Read More on This Topic  <\/p>\n<p>    Western philosophy: The rise of empiricism and rationalism  <\/p>\n<p>    The scientific contrast between Vesaliuss rigorous    observational techniques and Galileos reliance on mathematics    was similar to the philosophical contrast between Bacons    experimental method and Descartess emphasis on a priori    reasoning. Indeed, these differences can be conceived in more    abstract terms as the contrast between empiricism and    rationalism. This theme dominated the philosophical...  <\/p>\n<p>    The third definition of empiricism is a theory    of knowledge, or theory of justification. It views    beliefs, or at least some vital classes of beliefe.g., the    belief that this object is redas depending ultimately and    necessarily on experience for their justification. An    equivalent way of stating this thesis is to say that all human    knowledge is derived from experience.  <\/p>\n<p>    Empiricism regarding concepts and empiricism regarding    knowledge do not strictly imply each other. Many empiricists    have admitted that there are a    priori propositions but have denied that there are a    priori concepts. It is rare, however, to find a philosopher who    accepts a priori concepts but denies a priori propositions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Stressing experience, empiricism often opposes the claims of    authority, intuition,    imaginative conjecture, and abstract, theoretical, or    systematic reasoning as sources of reliable belief. Its most    fundamental antithesis is    with the latteri.e., with rationalism,    also called intellectualism or apriorism. A rationalist theory    of concepts asserts that some concepts are a priori and that    these concepts are     innate, or part of the original structure or    constitution of the     mind. A rationalist theory of knowledge, on the    other hand, holds that some rationally acceptable    propositionsperhaps including every thing must have a    sufficient reason for its existence (the     principle of sufficient reason)are a priori. A    priori propositions, according to rationalists, can arise from    intellectual intuition, from the direct        apprehension of self-evident truths, or from purely    deductive    reasoning.  <\/p>\n<p>    In both everyday attitudes and philosophical theories, the    experiences referred to by empiricists are principally those    arising from the stimulation of the sense organsi.e., from    visual, auditory, tactile,    olfactory, and gustatory     sensation. (In addition to these five kinds of    sensation, some empiricists also recognize     kinesthetic sensation, or the sensation of    movement.) Most philosophical empiricists, however, have    maintained that sensation    is not the only provider of experience, admitting as empirical the    awareness of mental states in introspection or reflection (such    as the awareness that one is in pain or that one is    frightened); such mental states are then often described    metaphorically as being present to an inner sense. It is a    controversial question whether still further types of    experience, such as moral, aesthetic, or    religious experience, ought to be acknowledged as empirical. A    crucial consideration is that, as the scope of experience is    broadened, it becomes increasingly difficult to distinguish a    domain of genuinely a priori propositions. If, for example, one    were to take the mathematicians intuition of relationships    between numbers as a kind of experience, one would be    hard-pressed to identify any kind of knowledge that is not    ultimately empirical.  <\/p>\n<p>    Even when empiricists agree on what should count as experience,    however, they may still disagree fundamentally about how    experience itself should be understood. Some empiricists, for    example, conceive of sensation in such a way that what one is    aware of in sensation is always a mind-dependent entity    (sometimes referred to as a sense datum). Others embrace some    version of direct realism, according to which one can    directly perceive or be aware of physical objects or physical    properties (see     epistemology: realism). Thus there may be radical    theoretical differences even among empiricists who are    committed to the notion that all concepts are constructed out    of elements given in sensation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Test Your Knowledge  <\/p>\n<p>      Libya Quiz    <\/p>\n<p>    Two other viewpoints related to but not the same as empiricism    are the pragmatism    of the American philosopher and psychologist     William James, an aspect of which was what he called    radical    empiricism, and logical    positivism, sometimes also called logical    empiricism. Although these philosophies are empirical in some    sense, each has a distinctive focus that warrants its treatment    as a separate movement. Pragmatism    stresses the involvement of ideas in practical experience and    action, whereas logical positivism is more concerned with the    justification of scientific    knowledge.  <\/p>\n<p>    When describing an everyday attitude, the word    empiricism sometimes conveys an unfavourable     implication of ignorance of or indifference to    relevant theory. Thus, to call a doctor an Empiric has been to call him a    quacka usage traceable to a sect of medical men who were    opposed to the elaborate medicaland in some views    metaphysicaltheories inherited from the Greek physician    Galen    of Pergamum (129c. 216 ce). The medical empiricists opposed to    Galen preferred to rely on treatments of observed clinical    effectiveness, without inquiring into the mechanisms sought by    therapeutic theory. But empiricism, detached from this        medical association, may also be used, more    favourably, to describe a hard-headed refusal to be swayed by    anything but the facts that the thinker has observed for    himself, a blunt resistance to received opinion or precarious    chains of abstract reasoning.  <\/p>\n<p>    As a more strictly defined movement, empiricism reflects    certain fundamental distinctions and occurs in varying degrees.  <\/p>\n<p>        Britannica Lists & Quizzes      <\/p>\n<p>                Health & Medicine Quiz              <\/p>\n<p>                Science List              <\/p>\n<p>                Arts & Culture Quiz              <\/p>\n<p>                Society List              <\/p>\n<p>    A distinction that has the potential to create confusion is the    one that contrasts the a posteriori not with the a priori but    with the innate.    Since logical problems are easily confused with     psychological problems, it is difficult to    disentangle the question of the causal origin of concepts    and beliefs from the question of their content and    justification.  <\/p>\n<p>    A concept,    such as five, is said to be innate if a persons possession    of it is causally independent of his experiencee.g., his    perception of various groupings of five objects. Similarly, a    belief is innate if its acceptance is causally independent of    the believers experience. It is therefore possible for beliefs    to be innate without being a priori: for example, the babys    belief that its mothers breast will nourish it is arguably    causally independent of his experience, though experience would    be necessary to justify it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Another supposedly identical, but in fact more or less    irrelevant, property of concepts and beliefs is that of the    universality of their possession or acceptancethat a priori or    innate concepts and beliefs must be held by everyone. There may    be, in fact, some basis for inferring universality from    innateness, since many innate characteristics, such as the fear    of loud noises, appear to be common to the whole human species.    But there is no inconsistency in the supposition that a concept    or belief is innate in one person and learned from experience    in another.  <\/p>\n<p>    Two main kinds of concept have been held to be a priori. First,    there are certain formal concepts of     logic and of mathematics    that reflect the basic structure of discourse: not, and,    or, if, all, some, existence, unity, number,    successor, and infinity. Secondly, there are the categorial    conceptssuch as substance, cause, mind, and Godwhich,    according to some philosophers, are imposed by the mind upon    the raw data of sensation in order to make experiences    possible. One might add to these the more specific theoretical    concepts of     physics, which are sometimes said to apply to    entities that are unobservable in principle.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the long     history of debate over the a priori, it was long    taken for granted that all a priori propositions are    necessarily truei.e., true by virtue of the meanings of their    terms (analytic) or true by virtue of the fact that their    negations imply a contradiction. Propositions    such as all triangles have three sides, all bachelors are    unmarried, and all red things are coloured are necessarily    true in one or both of these senses. Likewise, it was held that    propositions that are contingently true, or true merely by    virtue of the way the world happens to be, are a posteriori.    John is a bachelor and Johns house is red are propositions    of this type.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the 1970s, however, the American philosopher     Saul Kripke argued to the contrary that some a    priori propositions are contingent and    some a posteriori propositions are necessary. According to    Kripke, the referential properties of natural kind terms like    heat can be understood by imagining that their    referents were fixed, upon their introduction into the    language, by means of certain definite descriptions, such as    the cause of sensations of warmth. In other words,    heat was introduced as a name for whatever     phenomenon happened to satisfy the description the    cause of sensations of warmth. Of course, the phenomenon in    question is now known to be molecular motion. Thus    heat refers to molecular motion, then and now, because    molecular motion was the cause of sensations of warmth when the    term was introduced. Given this introduction, however, the    proposition heat causes sensations of warmth must be a    priori. Because its introduction stipulated that    heat is the phenomenon that causes sensations of warmth, it is    knowable independently of experience that heat causes    sensations of warmth, even though it is only a contingent    matter of fact that it does. On the other hand, the proposition    heat is molecular motion is a posteriori, because this fact    about heat was discovered (and could only be discovered)    through empirical scientific investigation. But the proposition    is also necessary, according to Kripke, because once the    referent of heat has been fixed as molecular motion,    there are no imaginable circumstances in which the term could    refer to anything else. This conclusion is supported by the    intuition that, if it were discovered tomorrow that sensations    of warmth in humans are actually caused by something other than    molecular motion, one would not say that heat is not    molecular motion but rather that sensations of warmth are    caused by something other than heat. Kripke proposed a similar    analysis of the referential properties of proper names like    Aristotle,    according to which a proposition like Aristotle was the    teacher of     Alexander the Great is contingent but a priori.  <\/p>\n<p>    Empiricism, whether concerned with concepts or knowledge, can    be held with varying degrees of strength. On this basis,    absolute,    substantive,    and partial empiricisms can be distinguished.  <\/p>\n<p>    Absolute empiricists hold that there are no a priori concepts,    either formal or categorial, and no a priori beliefs or    propositions. Absolute empiricism about the former is more    common than that about the latter, however. Although nearly all    Western philosophers admit that obvious     tautologies (e.g., all red things are red) and    definitional truisms (e.g., all triangles have three sides)    are a priori, many of them would add that these represent a    degenerate case.  <\/p>\n<p>    A more moderate form of empiricism is that of the substantive    empiricists, who are unconvinced by attempts that have been    made to interpret formal concepts empirically and who therefore    concede that formal concepts are a priori, though they deny    that status to categorial concepts and to the theoretical    concepts of physics, which they hold are a posteriori.    According to this view, allegedly a priori categorial and    theoretical concepts are either defective, reducible to    empirical concepts, or merely useful fictions for the    prediction and organization of experience.  <\/p>\n<p>    The parallel point of view about knowledge assumes that the    truth    of logical and mathematical propositions is determined, as is    that of definitional truisms, by the relationships between    meanings that are established prior to experience. The truth    often espoused by ethicists, for example, that one is truly    obliged to rescue a person from drowning only if it is possible    to do so, is a matter of meanings and not of facts about the    world. On this view, all propositions    that, in contrast to the foregoing example, are in any way    substantially informative about the world are a posteriori.    Even if there are a priori propositions, they are formal or    verbal or conceptual in    nature, and their necessary truth derives simply from the    meanings that attached to the words they contain. A priori    knowledge is useful because it makes explicit the hidden    implications of substantive, factual    assertions. But a priori propositions do not themselves express    genuinely new knowledge about the world; they are factually    empty. Thus All bachelors are unmarried merely gives explicit    recognition to the commitment to describe as unmarried anyone    who has been described as a bachelor.  <\/p>\n<p>    Substantive empiricism about knowledge regards all a priori    propositions as being more-or-less concealed tautologies.    If a persons duty is thus defined as that which he should    always do, the statement A person should always do his duty    then becomes A person should always do what he should always    do. Deductive reasoning is conceived accordingly as a way of    bringing this concealed tautological status to light. That such    extrication is nearly always required means that a priori    knowledge is far from trivial.  <\/p>\n<p>    For the substantive empiricist, truisms and the propositions of    logic    and mathematics exhaust the domain of the a priori.     Science, on the other handfrom the fundamental    assumptions about the structure of the     universe to the singular items of     evidence used to confirm its theoriesis regarded as    a posteriori throughout. The propositions of ethics    and those of metaphysics,    which deals with the ultimate nature and constitution of    reality (e.g., only that which is not subject to change is    real), are either disguised tautologies or    pseudo-propositionsi.e., combinations of words that, despite    their grammatical respectability, cannot be taken as true or    false assertions at all.  <\/p>\n<p>    The least thoroughgoing type of empiricism here distinguished,    ranking third in degree, can be termed partial empiricism. According to    this view, the realm of the a priori includes some concepts    that are not formal and some propositions that are    substantially informative about the world. The theses of the        transcendental idealism of Immanuel    Kant (17201804), the general scientific     conservation laws, the basic principles of morality and        theology, and the causal laws of nature have all    been held by partial empiricists to be both synthetic    (substantially informative) and a priori. As noted above,    philosophers who embrace the Kripkean notion of reference    fixing would add to this class propositions such as heat is    the cause of sensations of warmth and Aristotle was the    teacher of Alexander the Great, both of which derive their    presumed aprioricity from the hypothetical circumstances in which their    subject terms were introduced. At any rate, in all versions of    partial empiricism there remain a great many straightforwardly    a posteriori concepts and propositions: ordinary singular    propositions about matters of fact and the concepts that figure    in them are held to fall in this domain.  <\/p>\n<p>    So-called common sense might appear to be inarticulately    empiricist; and empiricism might be usefully thought of as a    critical force resisting the pretensions of a more speculative    rationalist philosophy. In the ancient world the kind of    rationalism that many empiricists oppose was developed by        Plato (c. 428c. 328 bce), the greatest of rationalist    philosophers. The ground was prepared for him by three earlier    bodies of thought: the Ionian    cosmologies of the 6th century bce, with their distinction between    sensible     appearance and a reality accessible only to pure        reason; the philosophy of Parmenides    (early 5th century bce),    the important early     monist, in which purely rational argument is used to    prove that the world is really an unchanging unity; and    Pythagoreanism,    which, holding that the world is really made of numbers, took    mathematics to be the repository of ultimate truth.  <\/p>\n<p>    The first empiricists in     Western philosophy were the Sophists,    who rejected such rationalist speculation about the world as a    whole and took humanity and society to be the proper objects of    philosophical inquiry. Invoking skeptical    arguments to undermine the claims of pure reason, they posed a    challenge that invited the reaction that comprised    Platos philosophy.  <\/p>\n<p>    Plato, and to a lesser extent Aristotle,    were both rationalists. But Aristotles successors in the    ancient Greek schools of Stoicism    and Epicureanism    advanced an explicitly empiricist account of the formation of    human concepts. For the Stoics the human    mind is at birth a clean slate, which comes to be stocked with    concepts by the sensory impingement of the material world upon    it. Yet they also held that there are some concepts or beliefs,    the common notions, that are present to the minds of all    humans; and these soon came to be conceived in a nonempirical    way. The empiricism of the Epicureans, however, was more    pronounced and consistent. For them human concepts are memory    images, the mental residues of previous sense experience, and    knowledge is as empirical as the ideas of which it is composed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most medieval    philosophers after St.     Augustine (354430) took an empiricist position, at    least about concepts, even if they recognized much substantial    but nonempirical knowledge. The standard formulation of this    age was: There is nothing in the intellect that was not    previously in the senses. Thus St. Thomas    Aquinas (122574) rejected innate ideas altogether.    Both     soul and body participate in perception, and all    ideas are     abstracted by the intellect from what is given to    the senses. Human ideas of unseen things, such as     angels and demons and even God, are derived by    analogy from    the seen.  <\/p>\n<p>    The 13th-century scientist Roger    Bacon emphasized empirical knowledge of the natural    world and anticipated the polymath     Renaissance     philosopher of science     Francis Bacon (15611626) in preferring observation    to deductive reasoning as a source of knowledge. The empiricism    of the 14th-century Franciscan     nominalist William    of Ockham was more systematic. All knowledge of what    exists in nature, he held, comes from the senses, though there    is, to be sure, abstractive knowledge of necessary truths;    but this is merely hypothetical and does not imply the    existence of anything. His more extreme followers extended his    line of reasoning toward a radical    empiricism, in which     causation is not a rationally intelligible    connection between events but merely an observed regularity in    their occurrence.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the earlier and unsystematically speculative phases of    Renaissance philosophy, the claims of Aristotelian logic    to yield substantial knowledge were attacked by several    16th-century logicians; in the same century, the role of    observation was also stressed. One mildly skeptical Christian    thinker, Pierre    Gassendi (15921655), advanced a deliberate revival    of the empirical doctrines of     Epicurus. But the most important defender of    empiricism was Francis    Bacon, who, though he did not deny the existence of    a priori knowledge, claimed that, in effect, the only knowledge    that is worth having (as contributing to the relief of the    human condition) is empirically based knowledge of the natural    world, which should be pursued by the systematicindeed almost    mechanicalarrangement of the findings of observation and is    best undertaken in the cooperative and impersonal style of    modern scientific research. Bacon was, in fact, the first to    formulate the principles of scientific     induction.  <\/p>\n<p>    A materialist and nominalist, Thomas    Hobbes (15881679) combined an extreme empiricism    about concepts, which he saw as the outcome of material impacts    on the bodily senses, with an extreme rationalism about    knowledge, of which, like Plato, he took     geometry to be the paradigm. For him    all genuine knowledge is a priori, a matter of rigorous        deduction from definitions. The senses provide    ideas; but all knowledge comes from reckoning, from deductive    calculations carried out on the names that the thinker has    assigned to them. Yet all knowledge also concerns material and    sensible existences, since everything that exists is a body.    (On the other hand, many of the most important claims of    Hobbess ethics    and     political philosophy certainly seem to be a    posteriori, insofar as they rely heavily on his experience of    human beings and the ways in which they interact.)  <\/p>\n<p>    The most elaborate and influential presentation of empiricism    was made by John    Locke (16321704), an early     Enlightenment philosopher, in the first two books of    his Essay    Concerning Human Understanding (1690). All    knowledge, he held, comes from sensation or from reflection, by    which he meant the introspective awareness of the workings of    ones own mind. Locke often seemed not to separate clearly the    two issues of the nature of concepts and the justification of    beliefs. His Book I, though titled Innate Ideas, is largely    devoted to refuting innate knowledge. Even so, he later    admitted that much substantial knowledgein particular, that of    mathematics and moralityis a priori. He argued that infants    know nothing; that if humans are said to know innately what    they are capable of coming to know, then all knowledge is,    trivially, innate; and that no beliefs whatever are universally    accepted. Locke was more consistent about the empirical    character of all concepts, and he described in detail the ways    in which simple ideas can be combined to form complex ideas of    what has not in fact been experienced. One group of dubiously    empirical conceptsthose of unity, existence, and numberhe    took to be derived both from sensation and from reflection. But    he allowed one a priori conceptthat of substancewhich the    mind adds, seemingly from its own resources, to its conception of    any regularly associated group of perceptible qualities.  <\/p>\n<p>    Bishop George    Berkeley (16851753), a theistic     idealist and opponent of     materialism, applied Lockes empiricism about    concepts to refute Lockes account of human knowledge of the    external world. Because Berkeley was convinced that in sense    experience one is never aware of anything but what he called    ideas    (mind-dependent qualities), he drew and embraced the inevitable    conclusion that physical objects are simply collections of    perceived ideas, a position that ultimately leads to phenomenalismi.e.,    to the view that propositions about physical reality are    reducible to propositions about actual and possible sensations.    He accounted for the continuity and    orderliness of the world by supposing that its reality is    upheld in the perceptions of an unsleeping God. The theory of    spiritual substance involved in Berkeleys position seems to be    vulnerable, however, to most of the same    objections as those that he posed against Locke. Although    Berkeley admitted that he did not have an idea of mind (either    his own or the mind of God), he claimed that he was able to    form what he called a notion of it. It is not clear how to    reconcile    the existence of such notions with a thoroughgoing empiricism    about concepts.  <\/p>\n<p>    The Scottish skeptical philosopher David    Hume (171176) fully elaborated Lockes empiricism    and used it reductively to argue that there can be no more to    the concepts of body, mind, and causal connection than what    occurs in the experiences from which they arise. Like Berkeley,    Hume was convinced that perceptions involve no constituents that can exist independently of    the perceptions themselves. Unlike Berkeley, he could find    neither an idea nor a notion of mind or self, and as a result    his radical    empiricism contained an even more parsimonious view of what exists. While    Berkeley thought that only minds and their ideas exist, Hume    thought that only perceptions exist and that it is impossible    to form an idea of anything that is not a perception or a    complex of perceptions. For Hume all necessary truth is formal    or conceptual, determined by the various relations that hold    between ideas.  <\/p>\n<p>        Voltaire (16941778) imported Lockes philosophy    into France. Its empiricism, in a very stark form, became the    basis of sensationalism,    in which all of the constituents of human mental life are    analyzed in terms of sensations alone.  <\/p>\n<p>    A genuinely original and clarifying attempt to resolve the    controversy between empiricists and their opponents was made in    the transcendental idealism of Kant,    who drew upon both Hume and Gottfried    Wilhelm Leibniz (16461716). With the dictum that,    although all knowledge begins with experience it does not all    arise from experience, he established a clear distinction    between the innate and the a priori. He held that there are a    priori concepts, or categoriessubstance and cause being the    most importantand also substantial or synthetic a    priori truths. Although not derived from experience, the latter    apply to experience. A priori concepts and propositions do not    relate to a reality that transcends    experience; they reflect, instead, the minds way of organizing    the amorphous mass    of sense impressions that flow in upon it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Lockean empiricism prevailed in 19th-century England until the    rise of     Hegelianism in the last quarter of the century    (see also     Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel). To be sure, the    Scottish philosophers who followed Hume but avoided his    skeptical conclusions insisted that humans do have substantial    a priori knowledge. But the philosophy of John    Stuart Mill (180673) is thoroughly empiricist. He    held that all knowledge worth having, including mathematics, is    empirical. The apparent necessity and aprioricity of    mathematics, according to Mill, is the result of the unique    massiveness of its empirical confirmation. All real knowledge    for Mill is inductive and empirical, and deduction is sterile.    (It is not clear that Mill consistently adhered to this    position, however. In both his     epistemology and his ethics,    he sometimes seemed to recognize the need for first principles    that could be known without proof.) The philosopher of        evolution Herbert    Spencer (18201903) offered another     explanation of the apparent necessity of some    beliefs: they are the well-attested (or naturally selected)    empirical beliefs inherited by living humans from their    evolutionary ancestors. Two important mathematicians and    pioneers in the philosophy of modern physics, William    Kingdon Clifford (184579) and Karl    Pearson (18571936), defended radically empiricist    philosophies of science, anticipating the logical empiricism of    the 20th century.  <\/p>\n<p>    The most influential empiricist of the 20th century was the    great British philosopher and logician Bertrand    Russell (18721970). Early in his career Russell    admitted both synthetic a priori knowledge and concepts of    unobservable entities. Later, through discussions with his    pupil Ludwig    Wittgenstein (18891951), Russell became convinced    that the truths of logic    and mathematics are analytic    and that logical analysis is the essence of philosophy. In his    empiricist phase, Russell analyzed concepts in terms of what    one is directly acquainted with in experience (where    experience was construed broadly enough to include not only    awareness of sense data but also awareness of properties    construed as     universals). In his     neutral monist phase, he tried to show that even the    concepts of     formal logic are ultimately empirical, though the    experience that supplies them may be introspective instead of    sensory.  <\/p>\n<p>    Doctrines developed by Russell and Wittgenstein influenced the    German-American philosopher Rudolf    Carnap (18911970) and the Vienna    Circle, a discussion group in which the philosophy    of logical    positivism was developed. The empirical character of    logical positivism is especially evident in its formulation of    what came to be known as the verification    principle, according to which a sentence is    meaningful only if it is either tautologous or in principle    verifiable on the basis of sense experience.  <\/p>\n<p>    Later developments in epistemology served to make some    empiricist ideas about knowledge and justification more    attractive. One of the traditional problems faced by more    radical forms of empiricism was that they seemed to provide too    slender a foundation upon which to justify what humans think    they know. If sensations can occur in the absence of physical    objects, for example, and if what one knows immediately is only    the character of ones own sensations, how can one legitimately    infer knowledge of anything else? Hume argued that the    existence of a sensation is not a reliable indicator of    anything other than itself. In contrast, adherents of a    contemporary school of epistemology known as externalism have    argued that sensations (and other mental states) can play a    role in justifying what humans think they know, even though the    vast majority of humans are unaware of what that role is. The    crude idea behind one form of externalism, reliablism, is    that a belief is justified when it is produced through a    reliable processi.e., a process that reliably produces true    beliefs. Humans may be evolutionarily conditioned to respond to    certain kinds of sensory stimuli with a host of generally true,    hence justified, beliefs about their environment.    Thus, within the framework of externalist epistemology,    empiricism might not lead so easily to skepticism.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read this article:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.britannica.com\/topic\/empiricism\" title=\"empiricism | philosophy | Britannica.com\">empiricism | philosophy | Britannica.com<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Empiricism, in philosophy, the view that all concepts originate in experience, that all concepts are about or applicable to things that can be experienced, or that all rationally acceptable beliefs or propositions are justifiable or knowable only through experience.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/rationalism\/empiricism-philosophy-britannica-com.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[431564],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-232444","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-rationalism"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/232444"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=232444"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/232444\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=232444"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=232444"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=232444"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}