The Empiricists on Cause Locke: powers in material objects cause our ideas; ideas of primary qualities represent external things Berkeley: the concept.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How do you know who I am ? Observations Construct a hypothesis Make predictions Test predictions? Devise an experiment? Can you be sure of your conclusions?
Advertisements

Frontiers of Western Philosophy Empiricism
Intro to Course and What is Learning?. What is learning? Definition of learning: Dictionary definition: To gain knowledge, comprehension, or mastery through.
A2 Psychology: Unit 4: Part C
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.
 Assumes we are born as if with a blank slate or white paper. All knowledge is learned from experience.  No innate knowledge  Ergo., no a priori necessity.
Scientific Enquiry Since the 18 th c, science has replaced religion as the means of answering questions about the universe. The scientific method was formulated.
Charting the Terrain of Knowledge-1
Newton and psychology Thanks to Newton, scientists and philosophers know that the world is controlled by absolute natural laws, so the inconsistencies.
Or Is your science safe? Virtue: Tentative Skepticism Deductive reason & Maths Vice: unsupportable intuitions that provide foundations of deduction.
Idealism.
How Can We Know Anything about the World Around Us? Idealism: we can know about the world because it is comprised of our ideas Phenomenalism: physical.
Locke’s Epistemology Empiricism: Epistemological school that maintains that, ultimately, all knowledge is rooted in sense experience. John Locke Seventeenth.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008 Chapter 2 - Philosophical Issues A History of Psychology: Ideas and Context (4 th edition) D. Brett King, Wayne Viney, and.
Rationalism: Knowledge Is Acquired through Reason, not the Senses We know only that of which we are certain. Sense experience cannot guarantee certainty,
John Locke: : Publication of An Essay Concerning Human Understanding &Two Treatises of Government. Basic Tenets of Locke’s Empiricism: Man.
Qualitative research in psychology. A distinct research process Inquiries of knowledge that are outside the framework prescribed by the scientific method,
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.
Parsing Categories of Belief Why Early Modern M&E divides belief into two types: Sensory & Mathematical.
Modern Philosophers Rationalists –Descartes –Spinoza –Leibniz Empiricists –Locke –Berkeley –Hume Epistemology - the theory of knowledge (what and how we.
Philosophy of science Philosophers of science. Early Philosophers Plato ( B.C.) –Rationalist Aristotle ( B.C.) –Empiricist.
Definitions of Reality (ref . Wiki Discussions)
Rationalism and empiricism: Concept innatism
History of Psychology “What is the mind?” Mind and science Mind and body.
Philosophical Influences on Psychology
John Locke – Free will and Determinism By Lewis and Jay.
Contesting Sociology as a Science. Interpretivism  Interpretivists argue that society cannot be studied in the same way as objects in natural science.
Philosophy Review Terms/People/Ideas we’ve studied.
Science and Psychology Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology.
Can you learn this? You have 2 minutes. Then you will try and write it down word for word “if you can conceive it to be possible for any mixture or combination.
What is Science ? Science has become synonymous with reliability, validity and certainty It is an activity characterized by three features : It is a search.
So, you think you know your philosophers?
Rationalist Epistemology Plato Descartes ( B.C.E. )( ) Plato Descartes ( B.C.E. )( )
+ Research Paradigms Research Seminar (1/2 of book complete with this PP)
Nature of Science. Science is a Tentative Enterprise  The product of the judgment of individuals  Requires individuals to defend their conclusions by.
© Michael Lacewing Hume and Kant Michael Lacewing co.uk.
The Turn to the Science The problem with substance dualism is that, given what we know about how the world works, it is hard to take it seriously as a.
Transition to Immanuel Kant
David Hume ( ) “The Wrecking Ball”
What do we cover in section C?. Unit 4 research methods Explain the key features of scientific investigation and discuss whether psychology can be defined.
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)
SCIENCE The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to identify and evaluate scientific methods and assumptions.
Definitions of Reality (ref. Wiki Discussions). Reality Two Ontologic Approaches What exists: REALISM, independent of the mind What appears: PHENOMENOLOGY,
Scientific Method Science philosophy involves itself in the methodology of science. Empirical knowledge – by observation - The Enlightenment (16-17 th.
Natural Sciences- Scope What is the area of knowledge about? What practical problems can be solved through applying this knowledge? What makes this area.
The Sciences Natural and Human (Social) Sciences as Areas of Knowledge
L ECTURE 15: C ERTAINTY. T ODAY ’ S L ECTURE In Today’s Lecture we will: 1.Review Hume’s radical empiricism and its consequences 2.Outline and investigate.
Lecture 13: Empiricism.
The problem of induction
An Introduction to THEORIES of LEARNING CHAPTER An Introduction to Theories of Learning, Ninth Edition Matthew H. Olson | B. R. Hergenhahn Copyright ©
What is science and what isn’t science?  Boiling an egg  Predicting the weather  Mapping a mountain  Drilling for oil  Choosing a new camera  Eating.
John Locke: empiricist  There are no innate ideas.  ALL knowledge comes from sense experience.
The Scientific Method. How can we ask questions about functions, interaction, etc.? The Scientific Method – Process of inquiry Discovery Science – Descriptive.
Empeiria and Positus M urat B aç Boğaziçi University Philosophy Department.
Philosophy of science What is a scientific theory? – Is a universal statement Applies to all events in all places and time – Explains the behaviour/happening.
Epistemology TIPS 1. What is Truth & Knowledge? 2. How can one determine truth from falsehood? 3. What are the pre- suppositions to knowledge?
SEARCHING FOR BALANCE 1.
Knowledge Theories of Knowledge.
David Hume and Causation
Immanuel Kant’s Theory of Knowledge
Philosophy and History of Mathematics
Major Periods of Western Philosophy
The Empiricists on Cause
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.
Major Periods of Western Philosophy
Rene Descartes Father of Modern Philosophy b. March in La Haye France wrote Meditations in 1641 d. February
Nature of Science Dr. Charles Ophardt EDU 370.
Science Review Game.
Presentation transcript:

The Empiricists on Cause Locke: powers in material objects cause our ideas; ideas of primary qualities represent external things Berkeley: the concept of material objects outside our ideas is unintelligible; God causes our ideas Hume: because the concept of cause is a relation of our ideas, a cause of our ideas is unintelligible God External material bodies Ideas in our mind “cause” is merely a habit of mind

Immanuel Kant ( ) Rationalism is wrong: we are not born with innate ideas (e.g., equality, God, shortest distance is a straight line, future events will always have causes); we know things about the world only through perceptions Empiricism is wrong: sense data alone do not give us knowledge of the world. We can know only if our minds are not blank slates or passive receptacles of neutral sense data

Kant’s Epistemology: Transcendental Idealism We know about things in the world not as they are in themselves (as noumena) but only insofar as they appear to us (as phenomena), universally structured by the mind’s categories (e.g., space, time, cause) –Objections: (1) If we are limited to phenomena, we cannot know whether the world is really as it appears; (2) categories differ culturally and linguistically (Sapir–Whorf hypothesis)

Principles of Scientific Knowledge Using inductive reasoning and preferring the simplest generalizations, we can derive probable laws from observations and repeated confirmations –The problem of induction: past experiences can be used to predict the probability of future ones only if the future is like the past—and that is unknown Instead of relying on induction, theories (e.g., evolution) use the hypothetical method to formulate experiments that are falsifiable Francis Bacon J. S. Mill Karl Popper

Scientific Paradigms, Revolutions, and Pseudoscience Scientific knowledge is organized according to paradigms (sets of theories and practices adopted by scientists to explain observations) When “anomalies” occur with regularity, one paradigm replaces another in a scientific revolution. This new way of organizing research transforms the discipline, changes the objects studied, and generates new discoveries: progress is thus not gradual or incremental –Pseudoscience is not falsifiable and does not suggest new experiments to be tested Thomas Kuhn