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         Empiricism Philosophy:     more books (100)
  1. Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind by Wilfrid Sellars, 1997-03-25
  2. Knowledge, Mind, and the Given : Reading Wilfrid Sellars's "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind," Including the Complete Text of Sellars's Essay by Willem A. Devries, Timm Triplett, et all 2000-09
  3. The Cambridge Companion to Logical Empiricism (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy)
  4. Constructive Empiricism: Epistemology and the Philosophy of Science by Paul Dicken, 2010-09-15
  5. Essays in Radical Empiricism(with linked TOC) by William James, 2010-05-26
  6. Decline and Obsolescence of Logical Empiricism : Carnap vs. Quine and the Critics (Science and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: Basic Works of Logical Empiricism) by Sahotra Sarkar, 1996-02-01
  7. Difference and Givenness: Deleuze's Transcendental Empiricism and the Ontology of Immanence (Topics in Historical Philosophy) by Levi R. Bryant, 2008-04-02
  8. Origins of Logical Empiricism (Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science)
  9. Between Rationalism and Empiricism: Selected Papers in the Philosophy of Physics by Erhard Scheibe, 2002-12-06
  10. Logical Empiricism and the Special Sciences : Reichenbach, Feigl, and Nagel (Science and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: Basic Works of Logical Empiricism) by Sahotra Sarkar, 1996-02-01
  11. Beyond Empiricism: Philosophy of Science in Sociology (Volume 32)
  12. The Minds of the Moderns: Rationalism, Empiricism, and Philosophy of Mind by Janice, Ph.D. Thomas, 2009-09
  13. The Emergence of Logical Empiricism : From 1900 to the Vienna Circle (Science and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: Basic Works of Logical Empiricism)
  14. Christian Empiricism: Studies in Philosophy and Religion by Ian Ramsey, 2009-12-31

1. Social Empiricism Philosophy, Science, Knowledge Sociology Of, Philosophy & Soci
Social empiricism philosophy, Science, Knowledge Sociology of, Philosophy Social Aspects. Social empiricism philosophy, Science
http://www.24-7-bestsellersbox.com/Solomon-Miriam-Social-Empirici-0262194619.htm
Title: Social Empiricism Subject2 Nonfiction, Science
Author: Solomon Miriam
Vidler Anthony The Architectu...

Van Eijck Jan, Visser Albert...

Veroff Robert Automated Reaso...

Victor David G., Raustiala K...
...
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2. PHILOSOPHY
Mediaeval Philosophy Philosophy 482F/G Seminar in Rationalism Philosophy 483F/GSeminar in Rationalism Philosophy 484F/G Seminar in empiricism philosophy 485F
http://www.registrar.uwo.ca/ACCALS/2002/sub_60.htm
PHILOSOPHY
Philosophy 020E Introduction to Philosophy
Philosophy 021 Reasoning and Critical Thinking ...
Academic Calendar

3. SYLLABUS SPRING 1998
Rationalism empiricism philosophy 300*. California State University,Fullerton. Syllabus. Descartes Notes Most Recent Update 3/8/98.
http://members.aol.com/LUFikeJr/re.html
California State University, Fullerton Syllabus Descartes Notes Most Recent Update: 3/8/98 "The Great Chain of Being" Instructor: Lawrence Udell Fike, Jr. Office: Education Classroom 479C Office Hours: W 11:00-11:50 F 11:00-11:50 F 12:00-12:50 Course Meeting Times: MW 13:00-14:15 Course Meeting Location: Education Classroom 124 Catalog Number: Cal State Fullerton Philosophy Club Link: Cal State University Fullerton Philosophy Club COURSE DESCRIPTION: in the thought of Descartes, Locke, Leibniz, Berkeley, and Hume. Some appreciation for the context in which these problems became central philosophical preoccupations will also be discussed. SHOULD YOU TAKE THIS COURSE? This is a reading- and discussion-intensive course that requires careful, patient analysis of sophisticated philosophical argumentation. The reading is intellectually demanding. I will attempt to moderate discussions sufficiently so that the material is accessible to those with minimal philosophical preparation, but will assume either a genuine interest in the problems and/or thinkers we are studying, or else at least one previous course in philosophy with an earned grade of A or B. See also the section titled, "Format" below. REQUIRED BOOKS (online links embedded in list):
  • Rene Descartes Meditations on First Philosophy
  • 4. Hippias: Limited Area Search Of Philosophy On The Internet
    Peter Suber, Rationalism Empiricism Rationalism empiricism philosophy 231000 MWF Peter Suber Carpenter 322 Fall 199899 Syllabus I haven't finished
    http://hippias.evansville.edu/search.cgi?locke&2

    5. Philosophy 1140: Empiricism
    Philosophy 1140 Empiricism. Time M 545 810pm Room CL 130 InstructorRick Grush (grush+@pitt.edu) Office Hours M 330pm - 500pm.
    http://mind.ucsd.edu/syllabi/99_00/Empiricism/!syllabus.html
    Philosophy 1140: Empiricism Time: M 5:45 - 8:10pm
    Room: CL 130
    Instructor: Rick Grush (grush+@pitt.edu)
    Office Hours: M 3:30pm - 5:00pm Schedule Quizzes and Exams Grades Study Questions ... Bibliography Short Description: In this course we will examine the three most prominent British Empiricists, John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume, focusing on their epistemological and metaphysical doctrines. Some topics from Descartes, Reid, and (maybe) Kant will also be raised, but only in brief controlled doses, and only for their utility in illuminating the positions of the Big Three Empiricists. Readings will be from The Empiricists available in the Bookstore, and from secondary literature on reserve in the library and/or available electronically from this website. Specific readings are detailed on the schedule. Schedule (Weeks without lectures due to holiday are in red. Lectures marked with a 'Q' will begin with a quiz.) Session 01 (01.10.00): Introductory Lecture.
    Session (01.17.00): No Meeting. MLK.
    Session 02
    (01.24.00): Q

    6. Philosophy 1140 Empiricism
    Philosophy 1140 Empiricism. Quiz 3. 02.07.00. Name_. Whichof the following properties of a liter of water is a relational property?
    http://mind.ucsd.edu/syllabi/99_00/Empiricism/exams&quizzes/quiz3_answers.html
    Philosophy 1140 Empiricism. Quiz 3. 02.07.00 Which of the following properties of a liter of water is a relational property?
      - The property of having a mass of 1000 grams. - The property of taking up 1000 cubic centimeters of space. The property of being able to dissolve sugar. - The property of turning into a solid at or below degrees centigrade.
    [A relational property is a property something has in virtue of both some feature it sas AS WELL AS some feature of something else. Mass, size, and freezing point don't depend on anything else being the way it is they depend only on the water's properties. But ability to dissolve sugar depends on sugar being the way it is. If sugar were different, water might not be able to dissolve it.] Locke claims that what we need in order to answer questions of identities is
      - A tertium quid A principium individuationis - A non sequitur - A res cogitans
    [This is the phrase he uses.] Locke gives the same treatment to the identity of finite spirits and particles of matter. The decisive factor in their identity is: - Their qualities.

    7. Philosophy 331 — British Empiricism
    Philosophy 331 — British Empiricism. Herter 205, MWF 125. Instructor CreightonRosental. Office Hours Bartlett 69, Friday 215315 PM, and by appointment.
    http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~rosental/syllabus for british empiricism.htm
    Home Research Teaching experience Education Philosophy 331 — British Empiricism Herter 205, MWF 1:25 Instructor: Creighton Rosental Office Hours: Bartlett 69, Friday 2:15-3:15 PM, and by appointment Department phone: 545-2330 Email: rosental@philos.umass.edu Required Texts John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding , ed. Winkler George Berkeley, A Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge , ed. Winkler David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature All books available at Atticus Albion Books, 8 Main St., Amherst Course Requirements Reading The reading assignments for this course will be fairly short, but frequent. You are expected to read all assigned material thoroughly and very carefully, with an eye for comprehension. You should come to class prepared to answer questions and participate in discussion. Course Grades Exams — 80% We will have three take-home exams during the course of the semester. Each exam will cover one of the major philosophers we shall read in class. Exams will involve essay answers to several pointed questions about the material. Exams are due one week after the questions have been distributed. Answers to questions are expected to take 10-12 typed, double-spaced pages total. Exam dates: First handed out March 3, due March 10 by 5 PM

    8. Harvard Theological Review: William James On An Unseen Order(*).
    Use the + sign for words that MUST be in the article, eg +Ford +SUV. Terms relatedto this article empiricism philosophy Cosmology Biblical Philosophy.
    http://www.findarticles.com/cf_0/m2399/1_93/61525127/p2/article.jhtml?term=willi

    9. British Empiricism [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
    18th century British philosophical movement which maintained that all knowledge comes from experience.Category Society philosophy Internet Encyclopedia of philosophy...... philosopher James McCosh argues that induction is more representative of later Scottishphilosophy than it is of earlier British empiricism, specifically that
    http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/e/emp-brit.htm
    British Empiricism
    "British Empiricism" refers to the 18th century philosophical movement in Great Britain which maintained that all knowledge comes from experience. Continental Rationalists maintained that knowledge comes from foundational concepts known intuitively through reason, such as innate ideas. Other concepts are then deductively drawn from these. British Empiricists staunchly rejected the theory of innate ideas and argued that knowledge is based on both sense experience and internal mental experiences, such as emotions and self-reflection. 18th century British Empiricists took their cue from Francis Bacon who, in the very first aphorism of his New Organon, hails the primacy of experience, particularly the observation of nature: Humans, who are the servants and interpreters of nature, can act and understand no further than they have observed in either the operation or the contemplation of the method and order of nature. Although British Empiricists disavowed innate ideas, in favor of ideas from experience, it is important to note that the Empiricists did not reject the notion of instinct or innateness in general. Indeed, we have inborn propensities which regulate our bodily functions, produce emotions, and even direct our thinking. What Empiricists deny, though, is that we are born with detailed, picture-like, concepts of God, causality, and even mathematics. Like Bacon, British Empiricists also moved away from deductive proofs and used an inductive method of arguing which was more conducive to the data of experience. In spite of their advocacy of inductive argumentation, though, British Empiricists still made wide use of deductive arguments. Commenting on the use of induction in the history of philosophy, 19th century Scottish philosopher James McCosh argues that induction is more representative of later Scottish philosophy than it is of earlier British Empiricism, specifically that of Locke:

    10. EMPIRICISM AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
    empiricism AND THE philosophy OF MIND. by. Wilfrid Sellars
    http://www.ditext.com/sellars/epm.html

    11. Locke
    A Note on "empiricism and the philosophy of Mind" by ROBERT H. GRIMM Published in Philosophical Studies 10 (1959) 4952.
    http://www.philosophypages.com/ph/lock.htm
    Philosophy
    Pages
    F A Q Dictionary ... Locke

    John Locke
    Life and Works
    Empiricism

    Qualities

    Liberty
    ...
    Internet Sources
    Although he completed a philosophical education at Oxford, John Locke declined the offer of a permanent academic position in order to avoid committing himself to a religious order. Having also studied medicine, he served for many years as private physician and secretary to Anthony Ashley Cooper, the first Earl of Shaftesbury and one of the Lord Proprietors of the Carolina Colonies. Locke's involvement with this controversial political figure led to a period of self-imposed exile in Holland during the 1680s, but after the Glorious Revolution of 1688 he held several minor governmental offices. A friend of Isaac Newton and Robert Boyle , Locke was also an early member of the Royal Society. He studied and wrote on philosophical, scientific, and political matters throughout his life, in a voluminous correspondence and ample journals , but the public works for which he is best known were published in a single, sudden burst. The fundamental principles of Locke's philosophy are presented in An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690), the culmination of twenty years of reflection on the origins of human knowledge. According to Locke, what we know is always properly understood as

    12. Continental Rationalism [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
    17th century philosophical movement. Rival to British empiricism.Category Society philosophy Internet Encyclopedia of philosophy...... Contemporary historians of philosophy challenge this traditional distinctionbetween rationalism and empiricism. Louis Loeb, for
    http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/r/rat-cont.htm
    Continental Rationalism The term "Continental Rationalism" traditionally refers to a 17th century philosophical movement begun by Descartes . After Descartes, several dozen scientists and philosophers continued his teachings throughout continental Europe and, accordingly were titled "Cartesians." Some Cartesians strayed little from Descartes' scientific and metaphysical theories. Others incorporated his theories into Calvinistic theology. But a handful of philosopher s influenced by Descartes were more original in developing their own views and these people are included under the more general title "rationalists." the principle rationalists include Benedict Spinoza , Nicholas Malebranche , Gottfried Willhelm Leibniz, and Christian Wolff. Continental Rationalism is usually understood in relation to its rival 17th century movement, British Empiricism , founded by John Locke. The radical division between these two schools was first articulated by Thomas Reid in his Inquiry Concerning the Human Mind Contemporary historians of philosophy challenge this traditional distinction between rationalism and empiricism. Louis Loeb, for example, argues for an alternative classification of 17th and 18th century philosophers which is more representative of t he actual content of their metaphysical and epistemological positions. In spite of Loeb's suggestions, the traditional division between rationalism and empiricism offered by Reid has at least some foundation, and is convenient for understanding the evolution of philosophical theories during the modern period of philosophy.

    13. A Note On "Empiricism And The Philosophy Of Mind"
    A Note on empiricism and the philosophy of Mind . by ROBERT H. GRIMMDUKE UNIVERSITY. Published in Philosophical Studies 10 (1959) 4952.
    http://www.ditext.com/grimm/grimm.html
    A Note on "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind"
    by ROBERT H. GRIMM DUKE UNIVERSITY Published in Philosophical Studies In "Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind," Wilfrid Sellars launches "a general critique of the entire framework of givenness," a broad attack on what he calls the "Myth of the Given" (p. 254). In so doing, he questions the notion that empirical knowledge has its foundation in knowledge of a privileged stratum of particular facts, explicitly pointing out that "if observation reports are construed as actions, if their correctness is interpreted as the correctness of an action, and if the authority of an observation report is construed as the fact that making it is 'following a rule' in the proper sense of this phrase, then we are face to face with givenness in its most straightforward form" (p. 296). For, he says, on these stipulations "one is committed to a stratum of authoritative non-verbal episodes ('awareness') the authority of which accrues to a super-structure of verbal actions, provided that the expressions occurring in these actions are properly used" (p. 296), What is his alternative? He carefully rejects the notion that a token, or utterance, of an expression, "This is green" for instance, "expresses observational knowledge" if and only if the circumstances are of a certain kind, i.e. the utterance "is a manifestation of a tendency to produce overt or covert tokens of "This is green' given a certain set if and only if a green object is being looked at in standard conditions" (p. 297). This won't do, be says, because "it is the knowledge or belief that the circumstances are of a certain kind, and not the mere fact that they are of this kind, which contributes to bringing about the action" of an observation report (p. 296).

    14. Empiricism And The Philosophy Of Mind
    empiricism and the philosophy of Mind von Wilfrid Sellars, Robert Brandom, Richard Rorty auf ethikkomission.de
    http://www.ethikkomission.de/0674251555.html

    15. The KLI Theory Lab - Keywords - Empiricism
    Keywords empiricism; philosophy of science; pragmatism. Skyrms, B. 1985b. Keywordsempiricism; philosophy of science; pragmatism. Stemmer, N. 1973a.
    http://www.kli.ac.at/theorylab/Keyword/E/empiricism.html
    empiricism This keyword was found on the following pages:
    Bealer, G.
    The incoherence of empiricism. In Wagner/Warner, Naturalism Keywords: empiricism naturalism
    Feyerabend, P.K.
    1962. Explanation, reduction, and empiricism. In Feigl/Maxwell, Scientific Explanation Keywords: empiricism explanation reduction
    Flamm, D.
    1983. Ludwig Boltzmann and his influence on science. Studies in the History and Biology of Science Keywords: atomism Boltzmann Einstein empiricism ...
    Rosenberg, A.
    1975. Propter hoc, ergo post hoc. American Philosophical Quarterly Keywords: causality empiricism epistemology philosohy of science ...
    Rosenberg, A.
    1983. Protagoras among the physicists. Critical notice of [ van Fraassen 1980 Dialogue [Canada] Keywords: empiricism explanation philosohy of science realism ...
    Skyrms, B.
    Pragmatics and Empiricism. New Haven, CN: London: Yale University Press. Keywords: empiricism philosophy of science pragmatism
    Skyrms, B.
    1985. Pragmatics and the principle of empiricism. In Rescher, The Heritage of Logical Positivism Keywords: empiricism philosophy of science pragmatism
    Stemmer, N.

    16. The KLI Theory Lab - Keywords - Comprehensive Evolutionary Epistemology
    Keywords empiricism; philosophy of science; pragmatism. Skyrms, B.1985b. Keywords empiricism; philosophy of science; pragmatism.
    http://www.kli.ac.at/theorylab/Keyword/C/ComprehensiveEE.html
    comprehensive evolutionary epistemology This keyword was found on the following pages:
    De Regt, H.
    1998. Scientific realism and the false promise of evolutionary epistemology. In Derksen, The Promise of Evolutionary Epistemology Keywords: comprehensive evolutionary epistemology generalized evolutionary theory naturalism philosophy of science ... Send us other comments Comments are welcome: theorylab@kli.ac.at

    17. British Empiricism: Fall 1991 Homepage
    Homepage for British empiricism as taught Fall 1991. Part of the OhioLINK history of philosophy instructional website, developed by the Department of philosophy at Kent State University
    http://iws.ohiolink.edu/~sg-kent2/31004/go_f91_home.html
    OhioLINK History of Philosophy Website
    British Empiricism
    Fall 1991
    This is the homepage for the Fall 1991 class offering of our course on British Empiricism, taught by Professor Gayle Ormiston . Follow the hyperlinks on this page to a course syllabus, writing exercises, and other material of interest developed for this class. T his page is part of the OhioLINK History of Philosophy Instructional Website designed and developed by the Department of Philosophy at Kent State University. We are interested in any comments you may have concerning this project. Send e-mail to the KSU Department of Philosophy Instructional Website Development Team Return to the British Empiricism Homepage Return to the OhioLINK History of Philosophy Homepage
    This page was last modified Fri 9 Jul 1999 at 22:01:07 EDT.

    18. Dictionary Of Philosophy Of Mind - Empiricism
    empiricism is very much like phenomenalism. However, empiricism is a termmore commonly used in philosophy of science than philosophy of mind.
    http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~philos/MindDict/empiricism.html
    empiricism In its strong form, the thesis that there is no reality behind appearances. Thus, it is the job of science to catalog the formal relations which hold between appearances without claims of describing reality. See phenomenalism A weaker form of empiricism admits of the existence of a reality which is, however, trans-empirical. The transcendent nature of reality determines that we can have no knowledge of it and thus must simply catalog the formal relations between appearances. Empiricism is very much like phenomenalism . However, empiricism is a term more commonly used in philosophy of science than philosophy of mind . In either case, these positions are most commonly contrasted with realism Chris Eliasmith
    References

    19. Harvard University Press/Empiricism And The Philosophy Of Mind
    empiricism and the philosophy of Mind by Wilfrid Sellars Foreword Author RichardRorty Study Guide by Robert B. Brandom, published by Harvard University Press.
    http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/SELEMP.html
    Richard Rorty is Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford University . He is the author of the landmark works Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity ; and The Consequences of Pragmatism Robert B. Brandom is Distinguished Service Professor of Philosophy and Fellow of the Center for Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh.
    Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind
    Wilfrid Sellars
    Foreword Author Richard Rorty
    Study Guide by Robert B. Brandom The most important work by one of America's greatest twentieth-century philosophers, Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind is both the epitome of Wilfrid Sellars' entire philosophical system and a key document in the history of philosophy. First published in essay form in 1956, it helped bring about a sea change in analytic philosophy. It broke the link, which had bound Russell and Ayer to Locke and Humethe doctrine of "knowledge by acquaintance." Sellars' attack on the Myth of the Given in Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind was a decisive move in turning analytic philosophy away from the foundationalist motives of the logical empiricists and raised doubts about the very idea of "epistemology."

    20. Harvard University Press/Empiricism And The Philosophy Of Mind/Contents
    Table of Contents of empiricism and the philosophy of Mind by Wilfrid SellarsForeword Author Richard Rorty Study Guide by Robert B. Brandom, published by
    http://www.hup.harvard.edu/contents/SELEMP_toc.html
    Richard Rorty is Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford University . He is the author of the landmark works Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity ; and The Consequences of Pragmatism Robert B. Brandom is Distinguished Service Professor of Philosophy and Fellow of the Center for Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh.
    Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind
    Wilfrid Sellars
    Foreword Author Richard Rorty
    Study Guide by Robert B. Brandom Introduction by Richard Rorty
    An Ambiguity in Sense-Datum Theories
    Another Language?
    The Logic of 'Looks'
    Explaining Looks
    Impressions and Ideas: a Logical Point
    Impressions and Ideas: A Historical Point The Logic of 'Means' Does Empirical Knowledge Have a Foundation? Science and Ordinary Usage Private Episodes: The Problem Thoughts: The Classical View Our Rylean Ancestors Theories and Models Methodological versus Philosophical Behaviorism The Logic of Private Episodes: Thoughts The Logic of Private Episodes: Impressions Study Guide by Robert Brandom July 1997 Cloth edition: ISBN 0-674-25154-7 Paper edition: ISBN 0-674-25155-5 Philosophy: General

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