-
versions of
common sense philosophy. Most
forms of
empiricism give
epistemologically privileged status to
sensory impressions or
sense data,
although this...
-
Epistemological rupture (or
epistemological break) is a
notion introduced in 1938 by
French philosopher Gaston Bachelard, and
later used by
Louis Althusser...
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Epistemological particularism is the view that one can know
something without knowing how one
knows it. By this view, one's
knowledge is
justified before...
-
Epistemological realism is a
philosophical position, a
subcategory of objectivism,
holding that what can be
known about an
object exists independently...
-
Epistemological idealism is a
subjectivist position in
epistemology that
holds that what one
knows about an
object exists only in one's mind. It is opposed...
- In epistemology,
epistemological solipsism is the
claim that one can only be sure of the
existence of one's mind. The
existence of
other minds and the...
-
Epistemological pluralism is a term used in philosophy, economics, and
virtually any
field of
study to
refer to
different ways of
knowing things, different...
- 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint:
numeric names:
authors list (link)
Epistemological Despondency on
Discogs Epistemological Despondency on
Bandcamp v t e...
-
Epistemological Letters (French:
Lettres Épistémologiques) was a hand-typed,
mimeographed "underground"
newsletter about quantum physics that was distributed...
- are many
different kinds of ideologies,
including political, social,
epistemological, and ethical.
Recent analysis tends to
posit that
ideology is a 'coherent...