By the end of today you should be able to:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© Michael Lacewing Innate ideas Michael Lacewing.
Advertisements

© Michael Lacewing Empiricism on the origin of ideas Michael Lacewing
Innate ideas Michael Lacewing © Michael Lacewing.
Empiricism Part I John Locke ( CE) George Berkeley ( CE)
Empiricism All knowledge of things in the world is a posteriori (that is, based ultimately on experience). Purely mental (i.e., a priori) operations of.
David Hume Ideas and Thinking Low force and vivacity Conception, volition, memory, imagination, etc. Impressions Feeling High force and.
 Heavily influenced by Aristotle and Descartes  Empiricists around his time: › Berkeley, & Hume (all Brits including Locke)  Rationalists around his.
Locke’s Epistemology Empiricism: Epistemological school that maintains that, ultimately, all knowledge is rooted in sense experience. John Locke Seventeenth.
Rationalism: Knowledge Is Acquired through Reason, not the Senses We know only that of which we are certain. Sense experience cannot guarantee certainty,
HUME 1 BEHOLD THE RADICAL EMPIRICIST. David Hume Historian Economist Psychologist Philosopher.
Concept empiricism Michael Lacewing
© Michael Lacewing Plato and Hume on Human Understanding Michael Lacewing
CHAPTER FIVE: THE SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE P H I L O S O P H Y A Text with Readings ELEVENTH EDITION M A N U E L V E L A S Q U E Z.
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding John Locke.
Modern Philosophers Rationalists –Descartes –Spinoza –Leibniz Empiricists –Locke –Berkeley –Hume Epistemology - the theory of knowledge (what and how we.
Wednesday 11 th September 2013 Empiricism and rationalism L.O We are learning how Plato’s concept of ‘the cave’ combines both the ideas of empiricism and.
1 Introduction.
Rationalism and empiricism: Concept innatism
Philosophical Influences on Psychology
THE HISTORY OF PSYCHOLOGY. WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGY?  The study of behavior and mental processes Behavior - anything an organism does, observed actions Mental.
AP Psychology Unit 1: Psychology’s History & Approaches.
Epistemology, Part I Introduction to Philosophy Jason M. Chang.
1 The Empiricists: Hume Theory of Ideas Soazig Le Bihan - University of Montana.
Transition to Immanuel Kant
David Hume ( ) “The Wrecking Ball”
LOCKE ON THE ORIGIN AND STRUCTURE OF IDEAS Text source: Essay Concerning Human Understanding, bk. 2, ch. 1-3, 5-7.
PSYCHOLOGY Target 1: Students will be able to describe some important milestones in psychology’s early development.
David Hume By: Lyla Kolman “Beauty in things exists in the mind which contemplates them.” ("ThinkExist.com")
L ECTURE 14: H UME ’ S R ADICAL E MPIRICISM. T ODAY ’ S L ECTURE In Today’s Lecture we will: 1.Recap our investigation into empiricist theories of knowledge.
Views of Epistemology- Empiricism. Empiricism Empiricism- the belief that all knowledge about the world comes from or is based in the senses (experience)
EMPIRICISM:. JOHN LOCKE  RECOGNIZED AS THE “FOUNDING FATHER” OF WHAT WE NOW UNDERSTAND IS THE “SCHOOL OF EMPIRICAL PRACTICES.”  ADVOCATED THE CONCEPT.
Lecture 13: Empiricism.
Concept Empiricism By the end of today you should be able to: 1) Explain more fully what Concept Empiricism is and the arguments postulated by John Locke.
Further criticisms of Concept Empiricism Focus: To consider further criticisms of Concept Empiricism, alongside the criticism from Innatism.
1 John Locke’s Theory of Knowledge ( ). 2 Empiricist All knowledge is derived from experience.
John Locke: empiricist  There are no innate ideas.  ALL knowledge comes from sense experience.
What are the strengths and weaknesses of Descartes’ Trademark Argument? StrengthsWeaknesses p , You have 3 minutes to read through the chart you.
Concept Empiricist arguments against Concept Innatism
Epistemology TIPS 1. What is Truth & Knowledge? 2. How can one determine truth from falsehood? 3. What are the pre- suppositions to knowledge?
BRITISH EMPIRICISM 1.
An Empiricist Theory of Knowledge Locke’s Theory of Knowledge Lecture 6.
PHIL 200B ● Today – Locke's Essay concerning human understanding ● Method ( ) ● Locke's Empiricism – Against innate ideas/principles. – Ideas of.
Psychology. Objectives Describe how psychology developed from its prescientific roots in early understandings of mind and body to the beginnings of modern.
The Origin of Knowledge
GRADING: First essay 25% Second essay 35% Exam 25%
Introduction to Philosophy Plato’s Republic Greek Philosophy Socrates Socratic Method: Admit ignorance. Never rely on tradition. Continuously question.
Issues with Concept Empiricism
Plan – Give them clues and get them to come up with the objections
Concept Innatism.
11th September 2013 P1 AS (Yr 12) Mr Jez Echevarría
Concept Empiricist Arguments against Concept Innatism
Issues with Concept Empiricism: Is the concept of God innate
The mind as a ‘tabula rasa’
PHILOSOPHY Empiricism
Rationalism versus Empiricism
John Locke and modern empiricism
Do Now Why would it be important to understand the history of psychology?
Empiricism All knowledge of things in the world is a posteriori (that is, based ultimately on experience). Purely mental (i.e., a priori) operations of.
Plato and Hume on Human Understanding
JOHN LOCKE ( ).
Do Now Why would it be important to understand the history of psychology?
On your whiteboard: What is innatism? Give two examples to support it
Chapter: Methods of Social Research
David Hume Trust Your Senses
Is the concept of substance innate?
Substance (things in themselves)“A something I know not what”
Powerpoint Highlights
The Hume of the Treatise?
Prescientific Psychology
Presentation transcript:

By the end of today you should be able to: Concept Empiricism By the end of today you should be able to: Explain more fully what Concept Empiricism is and the arguments postulated by John Locke and David Hume (using the proper terminology). 2 mins

Recap John Locke’s Concept Empiricism https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-buzVjYQvY&list=PLKu-oKsGn2hd-WU9QcUgFiHh8Mv67G6Ic&index=15 Recap John Locke’s Concept Empiricism Our mind is a Tabula Rasa (blank slate) – it contains no ideas (thoughts or concepts). NO INNATE IDEAS. This is shown if you observe new born babies. All our ideas derive from one of two sources: Sensation: Our experience of objects outside the mind, perceived through the senses. This gives us ideas of ‘sensible qualities’. Reflection: our experience of ‘internal operations of our minds’, gained through introspection or an awareness of what the mind is doing. This provides the ideas of perception, thinking, willing and so on. These ideas may well arrive later in childhood. Locke uses the term ‘idea’ to cover sensations and concepts! (We will use the term ‘concept’ and ‘idea’ interchangeably). 10 mins

David Hume’s Concept Empiricism Read Section 2 of Hume’s An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding Discuss in your groups what Hume is arguing and make notes. 5 mins

Ideas vs sensations All gained from experience (gold mountain/virtuous horse) Simple concepts If someone is not susceptible to the sensation, they cannot be susceptible to the corresponding ‘idea’ One exception to this, but so small that ‘it is scarcely worth our observing’

David Hume’s Concept Empiricism Impressions = the more lively sensations that we have when we see or hear or feel or love or hate. Ideas = the less lively sensations that we have when we think about seeing, hearing, feeling etc. What we are immediately and directly aware of are ‘perceptions’. ‘Perceptions’ are divided into ‘impressions’ and ‘ideas’, the difference between the two being marked by a difference of ‘forcefulness’ and ‘vivacity’, so that impressions relate roughly to ‘feeling’ (or ‘sensing’) and ideas to ‘thinking’. Hume, following Locke, divides impressions into those of ‘sensation’ and those of ‘reflection’. Impressions of sensation derive from our senses, impressions of reflection derive from our experience of mind, including emotions. Hume argues that ideas are ‘faint copies’ of impressions. 5 mins

Simple and Complex Concepts So… how do we form ideas of things we have never experienced? Read Chapter 2 from Locke’s second Book in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding. 10 mins

Simple and Complex Concepts How do we form ideas of things we have never experienced? Hume’s copy principle This says: all of our ideas are copies of our impressions. What it means is that all of our ideas are built up from copies of our impressions, by combining, separating, augmenting and diminishing them. 10 mins

Concept Empiricism… ALL OF OUR IDEAS, OUR CONCEPTS, THOUGHTS AND IMAGINATION MUST HAVE COME FROM OUR IMPRESSIONS.! 2 mins

Using blue book pages 110 – 113 answer – How did Hume’s empiricism influence his thoughts about God, himself, morality and causation? 3 mins