Results for 'radical empiricism'

977 found
Order:
  1. Radical Empiricism and Husserlian Metaphysics.Seth Vannatta - 2007 - The Pluralist 2 (3):17 - 36.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  2. Radical Empiricism, Critical Realism, and American Functionalism: James and Sellars.Gary Hatfield - 2015 - Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 5 (1):129-53.
    As British and American idealism waned, new realisms displaced them. The common background of these new realisms emphasized the problem of the external world and the mind-body problem, as bequeathed by Reid, Hamilton, and Mill. During this same period, academics on both sides of the Atlantic recognized that the natural sciences were making great strides. Responses varied. In the United States, philosophical response focused particularly on functional psychology and Darwinian adaptedness. This article examines differing versions of that response in William (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   8 citations  
  3. William James’s Essays in Radical Empiricism: A Critical Edition.H. G. Callaway (ed.) - 2022 - Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.
    This new critical edition is an examination of William James’s Essays in Radical Empiricism in light of the scientific naturalism prominent in James’s Principles of Psychology and the subsequent development of Darwinian, functional psychology and functionalism in psychology, the philosophy psychology and the philosophy of mind. This is sure to be a controversial look at James's late philosophy of "radical empiricism" and "pure experience." The critical perspective of the edition evokes realism of cognitive relations, contemporary (...) and recent developments in cognitive science and contemporary philosophy of mind. (shrink)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  4. A new name for some old ways of thinking: pragmatism, radical empiricism, and epistemology in W.E.B. Du Bois’s “Of the Sorrow Songs”.Walter Scott Stepanenko - 2020 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 87 (2):173-192.
    When William James published Pragmatism, he gave it a subtitle: A New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking. In this article, I argue that pragmatism is an epistemological method for articulating success in, and between, a plurality of practices, and that this articulation helped James develop radical empiricism. I contend that this pluralistic philosophical methodology is evident in James’s approach to philosophy of religion, and that this method is also exemplified in the work of one of James’s (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  5. The Concept of Experience in Husserl's Phenomenology and James' Radical Empiricism.Andrea Pace Giannotta - 2018 - Pragmatism Today 9 (2):33-42.
    In this paper, I develop a comparison between the philosophies of Husserl and James in relation to their concepts of experience. Whereas various authors have acknowledged the affinity between James’ early psychology and Husserl’s phenomenology, the late development of James’ philosophy is often considered in opposition to Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology. This is because James’ radical empiricism achieves a non-dual dimension of experience that precedes the functional division into subject and object, thus contrasting with the phenomenological analysis of the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  6. Kant’s Idealism as Radicalization of Empiricism.Maximilian Tegtmeyer - 2025 - Studi Lockiani. Ricerche Sull’Età Moderna 6:147-186.
    This paper extends John McDowell’s interpretative approach in “Hegel’s Idealism as Radicalization of Kant” to Kant’s relationship to Locke and Hume. Kant claims that the Critique of Pure Reason’s Transcendental Deduction is a more resolute execution of Hume’s more resolute execution of Locke’s epistemological project. I argue that Kant’s radicalization concerns the problem that, with the resources of empiricism, we cannot entitle ourselves to the concepts of an object in general, required to vindicate our mind as a capacity to (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  7. The incoherence of empiricism.George Bealer - 1992 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 66 (1):99-138.
    Radical empiricism is the view that a person's experiences (sensory and introspective), or a person's observations, constitute the person's evidence. This view leads to epistemic self-defeat. There are three arguments, concerning respectively: (1) epistemic starting points; (2) epistemic norms; (3) terms of epistemic appraisal. The source of self-defeat is traced to the fact that empiricism does not count a priori intuition as evidence (where a priori intuition is not a form of belief but rather a form of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   153 citations  
  8.  80
    The Temporal Assumption: Why All Previous Empiricisms Failed to Complete the Subtractive Move.Brandon Sergent - manuscript
    This paper identifies why previous radical empiricisms (Hume, Mill, Mach, phenomenalism) failed to achieve the complete subtractive epistemology that Experiential Empiricism (EE) accomplishes. All prior attempts removed external space and matter while retaining external time as an unexamined container. This temporal assumption provided an escape hatch through which metaphysical commitments returned. EE removes external temporality itself, treating past and future not as externally real dimensions but as present memory-experience and anticipation-experience. This move was unavailable to pre-Einstein thinkers who (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  9. Realistic Claims in Logical Empiricism.Matthias Neuber - 2015 - In Uskali Mäki, Stéphanie Ruphy, Gerhard Schurz & Ioannis Votsis, Recent Developments in the Philosophy of Science. Cham: Springer.
    Logical empiricism is commonly seen as a counter-position to scientific realism. In the present paper it is shown that there indeed existed a realist faction within the logical empiricist movement. In particular, I shall point out that at least four types of realistic arguments can be distinguished within this faction: Reichenbach’s ‘probabilistic argument,’ Feigl’s ‘pragmatic argument,’ Hempel’s ‘indispensability argument,’ and Kaila’s ‘invariantist argument.’ All these variations of arguments are intended to prevent the logical empiricist agenda from the shortcomings of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  10.  65
    Free Will and the Self-Contained Present: Why Agency Dissolves Under Experiential Empiricism's Temporal Framework.Brandon Sergent - manuscript
    This paper examines how Experiential Empiricism's treatment of time as present experiencing rather than external temporal succession fundamentally reframes the free will debate. When past exists only as present memory-content and future only as present anticipation-content, each experiential frame becomes self-contained. This dissolution of external temporal continuity eliminates the conceptual space required for traditional notions of decision, agency, and free will. The paper demonstrates that what we call "deciding" is better understood as present experiencing with particular phenomenological character (deliberation-feel, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  11. No Really, Just Shut Up and Calculate: How Experiential Empiricism Distills Quantum Mechanics.Brandon Sergent - manuscript
    Quantum mechanics has spawned over fifteen distinct ontological interpretations, all making identical empirical predictions while positing radically different metaphysical realities. This paper demonstrates that this proliferation stems from a single error: assuming quantum formalism describes mind-independent systems existing between measurements. Applying Experiential Empiricism's burden of proof methodology, we show that pure quantum mechanics requires no interpretation whatsoever. The Schrödinger equation describes limitation pattern evolution within experiential possibility space. The Born rule specifies actualization frequencies. Measurements are pattern actualizations, not interactions (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  12. The Root of the Third Dogma of Empiricism: Davidson vs. Quine on Factualism.Ali Hossein Khani - 2023 - Acta Analytica 38 (1):161-183.
    Davidson has famously argued that conceptual relativism, which, for him, is based on the content-scheme dualism, or the “third dogma” of empiricism, is either unintelligible or philosophically uninteresting and has accused Quine of holding onto such a dogma. For Davidson, there can be found no intelligible ground for the claim that there may exist untranslatable languages: all languages, if they are languages, are in principle inter-translatable and uttered sentences, if identifiable as utterances, are interpretable. Davidson has also endorsed the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  13. The Ethics of Rationalism & Empiricism.Irfan Ajvazi - 2022 - Idea Books.
    Now Online: The Ethics of Rationalism & Empiricism Author: Irfan Ajvazi The Ethics of Rationalism & Empiricism Table of Contents: Chapter I: The Ethics of Rationalism Chapter II: Karl Popper and Rationalism Chapter III: Knowledge, Rationalism, Empiricism and the Kantian Synthesis Chapter IV: Kant’s Knowledge Empiricism and Rationalism Chapter V: The Radical Rationalism of Rene Descartes Chapter VI: Was Plato a rationalist or an empricist? Chapter VII: What is rationalism for Descartes? Chapter VIII: What is (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  14.  63
    Explanatory Bedrock and Evaluative Foundation: Why Experiential Empiricism's Admitted Limits Contain What Externalism's Hidden Axioms Lack.Brandon Sergent - manuscript
    Every epistemological framework eventually hits explanatory bedrock: primitives that cannot be explained by more fundamental principles. Externalism and Experiential Empiricism both reach such limits, but they differ radically in what those limits contain. This paper demonstrates that while both frameworks must accept unexplained primitives, only Experiential Empiricism's bedrock (valenced experience) simultaneously provides the evaluative foundation necessary for ethics and deterministic policy prescriptions. Externalist frameworks (materialism, theism, Platonism) hit bedrock at unexplained coordination mechanisms, initial conditions, or abstract structures that (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  15. (1 other version)Hume's Philosophy of Irreligion and the Myth of British Empiricism.Paul Russell - 2021 - In Recasting Hume and Early Modern Philosophy: Selected Essays. New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 377-395.
    This chapter outlines an alternative interpretation of Hume’s philosophy, one that aims, among other things, to explain some of the most perplexing puzzles concerning the relationship between Hume’s skepticism and his naturalism. The key to solving these puzzles, it is argued, rests with recognizing Hume’s fundamental irreligious aims and objectives, beginning with his first and greatest work, A Treatise of Human Nature. The irreligious interpretation not only reconfigures our understanding of the unity and structure of Hume’s thought, it also provides (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  16. Levinas's Empiricism and James's Phenomenology.Randy L. Friedman - 2012 - Journal of Scriptural Reasoning 11 (2).
    Genealogies in philosophy can be tricky and even a little dangerous. Lines of influence and inheritance run much more linearly on paper than in reality. I am often reminded of Robert Frost's "Mending Walls" and the attention that must be paid to what is being walled in and what is being walled out. In other words, William James and Emmanuel Levinas are not natural conversation partners. I have always read James as a fellow traveler of Edmund Husserl, and placed both (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  17. Intuition and the Autonomy of Philosophy.George Bealer - 1998 - In Michael Raymond DePaul & William M. Ramsey, Rethinking Intuition: The Psychology of Intuition and its Role in Philosophical Inquiry. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 201-240.
    The phenomenology of a priori intuition is explored at length (where a priori intuition is taken to be not a form of belief but rather a form of seeming, specifically intellectual as opposed to sensory seeming). Various reductive accounts of intuition are criticized, and Humean empiricism (which, unlike radical empiricism, does admit analyticity intuitions as evidence) is shown to be epistemically self-defeating. This paper also recapitulates the defense of the thesis of the Autonomy and Authority of Philosophy (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   257 citations  
  18. A priori knowledge and the scope of philosophy.George Bealer - 1996 - Philosophical Studies 81 (2-3):121-142.
    This paper provides a defense of two traditional theses: the Autonomy of Philosophy and the Authority of Philosophy. The first step is a defense of the evidential status of intuitions (intellectual seemings). Rival views (such as radical empiricism), which reject the evidential status of intuitions, are shown to be epistemically self-defeating. It is then argued that the only way to explain the evidential status of intuitions is to invoke modal reliabilism. This theory requires that intuitions have a certain (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   136 citations  
  19. The Universal Assumption Problem in Epistemology.Brandon Sergent - manuscript
    This paper introduces and explores "The Universal Assumption Problem in Epistemology," arguing that every explanatory worldview, regardless of its specific tenets, commits the same fundamental structural error: the assumption of an entity or reality existing beyond direct experience to ground or explain experience itself. This pervasive pattern, termed the "assumption trap," inevitably leads to unprovable metaphysical commitments that generate pseudo-problems within philosophical discourse. Through a detailed pattern analysis across diverse frameworks, including religious, materialist, idealist, Platonist, and simulation theories, this paper (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  20. Conventionalism and the Impoverishment of the Space of Reasons: Carnap, Quine and Sellars.Kenneth R. Westphal - 2015 - Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 3 (8).
    This article examines how Quine and Sellars develop informatively contrasting responses to a fundamental tension in Carnap’s semantics ca. 1950. Quine’s philosophy could well be styled ‘Essays in Radical Empiricism’; his assay of radical empiricism is invaluable for what it reveals about the inherent limits of empiricism. Careful examination shows that Quine’s criticism of Carnap’s semantics in ‘Two Dogmas of Empiricism’ fails, that at its core Quine’s semantics is for two key reasons incoherent and (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   12 citations  
  21. "Relative" Spontaneity and Reason's Self-Knowledge.Addison Ellis - 2023 - Studies in Transcendental Philosophy 3 (3).
    Kant holds that the whole “higher faculty of knowledge” (‘reason’ or ‘understanding’ in a broad sense), is a spontaneous faculty. But what could this mean? It seems that it could either be a perfectly innocent claim or a very dangerous one. The innocent thought is that reason is spontaneous because it is not wholly passive, not just a slave to what bombards the senses. If so, then the rejection of Hume’s radical empiricism would suffice for Kant’s claim. But (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  22. From Atheism and Agnosticism to God-Indifference.Muhammad Asghari & Farideh Lazemi - 2025 - Occidentstudy 16 (1):33-62.
    The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were a period of fundamental transformation in the relationship between theology and philosophy. In England during this era, traditional Christian theology sought to present faith as a rational system, consistent with logical necessities. In contrast, a skeptical and naturalistic tradition was emerging, with figures such as Thomas Hobbes representing its most prominent voices. Hobbes, through teachings such as materialism, moral relativism, and the denial of natural religion, paved the way for new approaches to religion, while (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  23. Mad Speculation and Absolute Inhumanism: Lovecraft, Ligotti, and the Weirding of Philosophy.Ben Woodard - 2011 - Continent 1 (1):3-13.
    continent. 1.1 : 3-13. / 0/ – Introduction I want to propose, as a trajectory into the philosophically weird, an absurd theoretical claim and pursue it, or perhaps more accurately, construct it as I point to it, collecting the ground work behind me like the Perpetual Train from China Mieville's Iron Council which puts down track as it moves reclaiming it along the way. The strange trajectory is the following: Kant's critical philosophy and much of continental philosophy which has followed, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  24. The Rosst Program A Unified Exceptional Dynamical Framework for Physics, Consciousness, and Human-AI Collaboration.Mark Rosst - manuscript
    We present a single geometric dynamical system on the 112-dimensional quaternionic Wolf space ℳ₁₁₂ = E₈₍₋₂₄₎/(E₇ × SU(2)) that simultaneously unifies fundamental physics, resolves the measurement problem, provides geometric mechanisms for low-energy nuclear reactions, predicts the observed dark-to-baryonic ratio ≈ 16/π ≈ 5.09, and establishes a rigorous foundation for safe human-AI alignment via a 44/68 sector decomposition. Large language models are shown to be natural trajectory simulators on this space, with metacognition and prompt engineering emerging as Ricci-type flows driven by (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  25. Toward Autopoietic Interoperability: An Exceptional Dynamical Scaffold for Cross-Domain Modeling.Mark Rosst - manuscript
    This paper is a standards-and-scaffold proposal; physics completion remains gated by explicit obligations (4D selection/Lorentzian emergence, chirality/index/anomaly closure, and parameter-free predictions). We propose a cross-domain scaffold—physics-facing, cognition-facing, and governance-facing—built from (i) a fixed exceptional geometric ontology scaffold, (ii) a certifiable stochastic dynamics grammar, and (iii) autopoietic interoperability as the dynamic goal for joint work. The ontology scaffold is the 112-dimensional quaternionic-Kähler Wolf space m112 ≅ e8(−24)/(e7 × SU(2)), used as a rigid symmetry-and-representation reference geometry. Operational dynamics are posed on a (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  26. Is the semiosphere post-modernist?George Rossolatos - 2015 - Kodikas- Ars Semeiotica 2 (38):95-113.
    This paper provides arguments for and against M.Lotman’s (2002) contention that Y.Lotman’s seminal concept of semiosphere is of post-modernist (post-structuralist; Posner 2011) orientation. A comparative reading of the definitional components of the semiosphere, their hierarchical relationship and their interactions is undertaken against the two principal axes of space and subjectivity in the light of Kantian transcendental idealism, as inaugural and authoritative figure of modernity, the Foucauldian discursive turn and the Deleuzian (post) radical empiricism (sic), as representative authors of (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  27. "In Defense of Pure Reason: A Rationalist Account of A Priori Justification" by Laurence BonJour.Tim Crane - 2003 - Mind 112 (447):502-6.
    Laurence BonJour divides approaches to a priori justification into three kinds. Quine’s radical empiricism denies the existence of any special category of a priori justification; moderate empiricism attempts to explain a priori justification in terms of something like knowledge of meaning or grasp of concepts; and rationalism postulates an irreducible ‘rational insight’ into the nature of reality. The positions therefore form a familiar trio of eliminativism, reductionism and anti-reductionism concerning a priori justification. BonJour’s interesting and (in the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  28. Rewriting the A Priori/A Posteriori Distinction.Peter Murphy - 2008 - Journal of Philosophical Research 33:279-284.
    The traditional way of drawing the a priori/a posteriori distinction, bequeathed to us by Kant, leads to overestimating the role that experience plays in justifying ourbeliefs. There is an irony in this: though Kant was in the rationalist camp, his way of drawing the distinction gives an unfair advantage to radical empiricism. I offer an alternative way of drawing the distinction, one that does not bias the rationalist/empiricist debate.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  29. Philosophical Foundations for the Ecological Approach.John T. Sanders - manuscript
    Harry Heft's Ecological Psychology in Context is an important book in many ways. For one thing, it adds considerably to our understanding of the historical background of J.J. Gibson's thought. But more than that, Heft aims to place ecological psychology not just historically, but philosophically. He says "This volume shows that radical empiricism stands at the heart of Gibson's ecological program, and it can usefully be employed as the conceptual centerpiece for ecological psychology more broadly construed" (p. xvi). (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  30. Los orígenes de la filosofía analítica y la trivialización de la filosofía.Kurt Wischin - 2015 - Disputatio. Philosophical Research Bulletin 4 (5):175--190.
    [ES] El logicismo de Frege o, en términos más generales, su esfuerzo por construir un fundamento de razonamiento deductivo para las matemáticas fue motivado por el deseo de combatir el empirismo radical que empezaba a dominar la discusión científica en las tierras de habla alemana después de la muerte de Hegel. El objetivo similar de Russell unas décadas después, en cambio, se debe en su origen preponderantemente al deseo de superar el neohegelianismo de Bradley. El joven Wittgenstein formuló a (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  31.  80
    Beyond the Logocentric-Causal Paradigm: The Case for Mystical Insight and Acausal Connection.Austin Vandygriff - manuscript
    This paper critiques the Western epistemological framework grounded in logocentrism and causal absolutism, which restricts truth to what can be linguistically expressed and causally explained. It argues that this dual commitment produces an ontological reductionism that equates language with reality and causality with necessity. Drawing on Carl Jung’s theory of synchronicity, William James’s radical empiricism, and insights from Taoism, Advaita Vedānta, and quantum nonlocality, I propose an expanded model of knowledge that recognizes acausal and non-linguistic modes of apprehension. (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  32. 'William James on Percepts, Concepts, and the Function of Cognition'.James O'Shea - 2018 - In Alexander Mugar Klein, The Oxford Handbook of William James. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    ABSTRACT: Central to both James’s earlier psychology and his later philosophical views was a recurring distinction between percepts and concepts. The distinction evolved and remained fundamental to his thinking throughout his career as he sought to come to grips with its fundamental nature and significance. In this chapter, I focus initially on James’s early attempt to articulate the distinction in his 1885 article “The Function of Cognition.” This will highlight a key problem to which James continued to return throughout his (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  33. Fifty Years of Quine’s Two Dogmas.Hans-Johann Glock, Kathrin Glüer & Geert Keil (eds.) - 2003 - Amsterdam: BRILL.
    W. V. Quine’s “Two Dogmas of Empiricism”, first published in 1951, is one of the most influential articles in the history of analytic philosophy. It does not just question central semantic and epistemological views of logical positivism and early analytic philosophy, it also marks a momentous challenge to the ideas that conceptual analysis is a main task of philosophy and that philosophy is an a priori discipline which differs in principle from the empirical sciences. These ideas dominated early analytic (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  34. Naturalistic Ethics and the Argument from Evil.Mark T. Nelson - 1991 - Faith and Philosophy 8 (3):368-379.
    Philosophical naturalism is a cluster of views and impulses typically taken to include atheism, physicalism, radical empiricism or naturalized epistemology, and some sort of relativism, subjectivism or nihilism about morality. I argue that a problem arises when the naturalist offers the argument from evil for atheism. Since the argument from evil is a moral argument, it cannot be effectively deployed by anyone who holds the denatured ethical theories that the naturalist typically holds. In the context of these naturalistic (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  35. From Methodological Authoritarianism to Epistemic Realism: Multidisciplinary Research Paradigms and the Post-modern Turn.Michael George Kizito - 2024 - E-Journal of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences (Ehass) 5 (16):2722 – 2733.
    The 20th century was characterized by a radical paradigm shift from modernism to postmodernism. Postmodernism rejected the stances of objectivism, universalism and the construction of meta-narratives that were evident in the modern epoch. Postmodernism re-affirms subjectivism, perspectivism and particularism in knowledge attribution, acquisition and justification. Postmodernism therefore dethrones positivism, radical empiricism and all their objectivistic scientific edifices. Post-modernism has its roots in post-colonialism, de-colonialism and the agitations for racial and gender justice. This academic masterpiece used critical historical (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  36. Higher Reason and Lower Reason.John S. Uebersax - manuscript
    The word 'reason' as used today is used ambiguous in its meaning. It may denote either of two mental faculties: a lower reason associated with discursive, linear thinking, and a higher reason associated with direct apprehension of first principles of mathematics and logic, and possibly also of moral and religious truths. These two faculties may be provisionally named Reason (higher reason) and rationality (lower reason). Common language and personal experience supply evidence of these being distinct faculties. So does classical philosophical (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  37. John Dewey and the Mind-Body Problem in the Context: The Case of "Neutral Monism".Andrii Leonov - 2018 - Actual Problems of Mind 19:72-96.
    The main focus of this paper is the mind-body problem in its relation to the doctrine of ‘neutral monism’ and the question who can be considered its proponents. According to Bertrand Russell, these are Ernst Mach, William James, and John Dewey (to name a few). This paper aims to clarify whether Russell himself was right in his conclusions or not. At first, I start with the clarification of the relation between ‘neutral monism’ and ‘dual-aspect theory’. Secondly, I analyze the ‘big (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  38. The Building Blocks of Thought: A Rationalist Account of the Origins of Concepts.Stephen Laurence & Eric Margolis - 2024 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    The human mind is capable of entertaining an astounding range of thoughts. These thoughts are composed of concepts or ideas, which are the building blocks of thoughts. This book is about where all of these concepts come from and the psychological structures that ultimately account for their acquisition. We argue that the debate over the origins of concepts, known as the rationalism-empiricism debate, has been widely misunderstood—not just by its critics but also by researchers who have been active participants (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   13 citations  
  39. From Tabula Rasa to Inductive Bias: Reframing Locke’s Problem in the Age of Generative AI.Xufeng Zhang & Han Li - 2026 - Review of Contemporary Philosophy 25 (01):17-37.
    Large language models (LLMs) often appear to vindicate a radical empiricist picture: train on vast corpora of experience-like text, and capacities emerge without explicit symbolic rules. Yet contemporary machine learning research repeatedly emphasizes that what is learned, how quickly it is learned, and how well it generalizes depend crucially on prior constraints: architectural structure, training objectives, optimization dynamics, and representational bottlenecks. These constraints constitute inductive biases in a precise, technical sense. This paper develops a philosophical argument that uses LLMs (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  40. A modest defense of manifestationalism.Jamin Asay & S. Seth Bordner - 2015 - Synthese 192 (1):147-161.
    As the debate between realists and empiricists in the philosophy of science drags on, one point of consensus has emerged: no one wants to be a manifestationalist. The manifestationalist is a kind of radical empiricist who argues that science provides theories that aim neither at a true picture of the entire world, nor even an empirically adequate picture that captures the world in all its observable respects. For manifestationalists, science aims only at providing theories that are true to the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  41. Quine on the Analytic/Synthetic Distinction.Russell Gillian - 2013 - In Ernie Lepore & Gilbert Harman, A Companion to W. V. O. Quine. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 181-202.
    A critical survey of Quine's arguments against the analytic/synthetic distinction.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  42. Reichenbach’s Concept of Logical Analysis of Science and his Lost Battle against Kant.Nikolay Milkov - 2008 - Contributions of the Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society 16:224-226.
    Logical empiricists claimed that following modern mathematical logic and math-ematical physics, they resolutely abandoned the Kantian synthetic a priori. Recently, this claim was challenged by Michael Friedman and Alan Richardson who have argued that Kant’s scientific legacy in the twentieth century philosophy was much more complex and subtle. Even before them, Quine insisted that the logical empiricists still followed Kant, above all, in preserving the sharp distinction between the underlying a priori framework of logic, on the one hand, and the (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  43. Radykalny konwencjonalizm współcześnie.Trela Renata - 2014 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 4 (2):325-340.
    Inthisarticle,IreconstructKazimierzAjdukiewicz’sviewthathecalledradical conventiona‐ l i s m (as opposed to moderate conventionalism developed by Henri Poincaré and Pierre Duhem). then, I recall little‐known criticism of this approach developed by Stefan Amsterdamski. Finally, I demonstrate, contrary to the conception of the originator’s declarations, that a radical conventio‐ nalism is not a ‘paper ction’. On the other hand, the standpoint of radical conventionalism is useful due to the precision of expressions provided to it by Ajdukiewicz; it shows the di culties that (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  44. Differences between Quine's and Gibson's interpretations of the naturalized epistemology project: Consequences of Gibson's naturalism.Milos Bogdanovic - 2018 - Theoria: Beograd 61 (1):41-58.
    In this paper we will try to show the differences between Quine’s and Gibson’s interpretation of the naturalized epistemology project. Namely, although Gibson points out that the genetic approach advocated by Quine is the best strategy there is to investigate the relations between evidence and theory, and that externalizing of empiricism that it requires is one of Quine’s major philosophical contributions, we argue that the assumptions on which Gibson’s project is based, apart from the fact that they are in (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  45. Symmetry and Reformulation: On Intellectual Progress in Science and Mathematics.Josh Hunt - 2022 - Dissertation, University of Michigan
    Science and mathematics continually change in their tools, methods, and concepts. Many of these changes are not just modifications but progress---steps to be admired. But what constitutes progress? This dissertation addresses one central source of intellectual advancement in both disciplines: reformulating a problem-solving plan into a new, logically compatible one. For short, I call these cases of compatible problem-solving plans "reformulations." Two aspects of reformulations are puzzling. First, reformulating is often unnecessary. Given that we could already solve a problem using (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  46. Meditations on Western Philosophy.Charles Bakker - manuscript
    In this paper I shall explain how I came to realize that for as long as I believed that there exists an epistemic gap, or veil of perception, separating the world into that which is subjective and internal to the mind from that which is objective and external to the mind, I was unable to provide a compelling argument for the existence of this same epistemic gap.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  47. Empirismo y derechos humanos. Unas reflexiones a partir de la Filosofía del Derecho de K. Olivecrona.Oscar Vergara - 2017 - Persona y Derecho 75 (2017/1):7 - 29.
    Resumen: Tomado en serio, el empirismo parece abocar a la negación de los derechos humanos; al menos entendidos como expresión de la naturaleza humana. Bajo esta óptica, K. Olivecrona rechaza explícitamente todo Derecho natural, por considerarlo una noción metafísica. En cambio, cuando describe el Derecho positivo, se encuentra con que éste parece asegurar un determinado orden de valores. Olivecrona, además de describir este dato, en diversos escritos asume dichos valores e incluso los defiende. Esta última postura no es muy coherente (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  48. Political realism as ideology critique.Janosch Prinz & Enzo Rossi - 2017 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 20 (3):334-348.
    This paper outlines an account of political realism as a form of ideology critique. Our focus is a defence of the normative edge of this critical-theoretic project against the common charge that there is a problematic trade-off between a theory’s groundedness in facts about the political status quo and its ability to consistently envisage radical departures from the status quo. To overcome that problem we combine insights from three distant corners of the philosophical landscape: theories of legitimacy by Bernard (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   130 citations  
  49. The given and the hard problem of content.Pietro Salis - 2024 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 23 (4):797-821.
    Wilfrid Sellars’ denunciation of the Myth of the Given was meant to clarify, against empiricism, that perceptual episodes alone are insufficient to ground and justify perceptual knowledge. Sellars showed that in order to accomplish such epistemic tasks, more resources and capacities, such as those involved in using concepts, are needed. Perceptual knowledge belongs to the space of reasons and not to an independent realm of experience. Dan Hutto and Eric Myin have recently presented the Hard Problem of Content as (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  50. ‘‘Quine’s Evolution from ‘Carnap’s Disciple’ to the Author of “Two Dogmas.Greg Frost-Arnold - 2011 - Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 1 (2):291-316.
    Recent scholarship indicates that Quine’s “Truth by Convention” does not present the radical critiques of analytic truth found fifteen years later in “Two Dogmas of Empiricism.” This prompts a historical question: what caused Quine’s radicalization? I argue that two crucial components of Quine’s development can be traced to the academic year 1940–1941, when he, Russell, Carnap, Tarski, Hempel, and Goodman were all at Harvard together. First, during those meetings, Quine recognizes that Carnap has abandoned the extensional, syntactic approach (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   13 citations  
1 — 50 / 977