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Empiricism, Sensationalism,

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Empiricism, Sensationalism, & Positivism British Empiricism Empiricism: philosophy that stresses the importance of experience in the attainment of knowledge ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Empiricism, Sensationalism,


1
Empiricism, Sensationalism, Positivism
2
  • British Empiricism
  • Empiricism philosophy that stresses the
    importance of experience in the attainment of
    knowledge (text)
  • Generally, inner experience not included in the
    definition reference is to sensory experience.
  • Some points re empiricism (text)
  • Sensory experience constitutes the primary data
    no suggestion that experience alone constitutes
    knowledge
  • Knowledge cant exist until sensory evidence has
    first been gathered I.e., attainment of
    knowledge begins with sensory experience
  • All subsequent intellectual processes must focus
    only on sensory experience.

3
  • Although British Empiricists disavowed innate
    ideas, in favor of ideas from experience, they
    did not reject the notion of instinct or
    innateness in general
  • we have inborn propensities which regulate our
    bodily functions, produce emotions, and even
    direct our thinking.
  • What Empiricists deny is that we are born with
    detailed, picture-like, concepts of God,
    causality, mathematics, etc
  • Like Bacon, British Empiricists also moved away
    from deductive proofs and used inductive method
    of arguing
  • (In spite of their advocacy of inductive
    argumentation, though, British Empiricists still
    made wide use of deductive arguments)

4
  • Major philosophers associated with British
    Empiricism
  • Thomas Hobbes
  • John Locke
  • George Berkeley
  • David Hume.
  • James Mill and his 19th century son J.S. Mill
  • Restricting the British Empiricist movement to
    these few is misleading.
  • Until rise of English idealism (ca 1850), all
    British philosophy after Locke bears the marks of
    his empiricism.
  • More than any other philosopher, Locke was cited
    as an authority by philosophers, philosophical
    theologians, and political thinkers. (In fact,
    lengthy article on "metaphysics" in the first
    edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica (1773) is
    essentially a summary of Locke).

5
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
  • Founder of British empiricism
  • Descartes had offered mechanistic explanation of
    animal behavior
  • Hobbes next logical step is to view man as
    machine, also
  • Hobbes became 1st thoroughgoing opponent of
    rationalism
  • First modern determinist (reviving materialism of
    Democritus)
  • Every thought, feeling, purpose was simply
    internal motion (in brain)
  • All experience is some special form of motion
    e.g., no distinction between the will to do
    something and the doing of it.
  • Sensation is a continuation of motion that
    impinged on sense organs, which transmit motion
    through the nerves to the brain
  • Memory imagination movements slowly decaying
  • Thus, physical basis for memory
  • Mind reduces to material processes
  • Monism strongly opposed to Cartesian dualism
  • Some things remembered better than others
  • Memory based on contiguity and similarity
  • Pleasure due to speeding up of flow of blood
    pain due to impediment of blood
  • Changing rate of these physiological processes
    leads to emotional feelings and to general bodily
    reactions that augment or inhibit a tendency to
    action.
  • All actions initiated by endeavours small,
    incipient actions or beginnings of actions
  • Not just readiness/desire to act not a mental
    event

6
  • Some background
  • Primarily a political theorist
  • Leviathan all powerful state (e.g., English
    monarchy) which men must accept if they are to
    avoid destroying one another. Need for such a
    state arises because of the nature of man.
  • Seeks pleasure and avoids pain
  • Society prevents excessive pleasure-seeking which
    infringes on rights of others
  • Mainspring of human conduct self-interest (most
    important motive fear)

7
  • This was immensely important system of ideas
  • Human acts result from an objectively knowable
    human nature
  • Man is made in such a way that analysis may make
    prediction and control possible

8
John Locke (1632-1704)
  • Usually regarded as originator of British
    Associationism, although Hobbes preceded him
  • Wrote Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690)
  • All knowledge comes through experience, either
    through the senses or through reflection on
    sensory data.
  • No innate knowledge Tabula Rasa
  • Probably most important aspect of Essay
  • Attack on Descartes belief in innate ideas.
  • The Tabula Rasa
  • Mind at birth is blank slate.
  • Idea not original Aristotle. Locke rescued the
    idea from obscurity
  • If born without ideas, how is it that adult minds
    are filled with so many thoughts, concepts,
    images?
  • EXPERIENCE all depends on individual
    experiences. (Note Now this begins to sound
    modern)
  • Only natural that we think we have innate ideas.
    Few can remember a time when they didnt have an
    idea of, e.g., God.
  • Locke says were taught the idea when young, so
    it isnt surprising that we cant recall a time
    when we didnt have the idea
  • Similarly, no innate ideas of truth, honesty,
    goodness, beauty, etc. They arent things out
    there they are acquired by experience.

9
  • Kinds of experience
  • Sensation primary. All ideas built from
    initial sensations
  • Reflection operations of the mind (e.g.,
    thinking, doubting, perceiving, reasoning, etc)
  • Mind can combine simple ideas into a compound
    (e.g., red, blue, gray. Leads to color)
  • Mind can bring 2 ideas together and compare them
    (e.g., lighter than heavier than..)
  • Mind can abstract properties
  • Lockes views have been oversimplified
  • He does not take everything away from mind of
    newborn. What he did say os
  • No inborn ideas all are gained through
    experience
  • Mind has innate capacity to act on incoming
    associations and organize them, abstract them,
    etc.
  • Notion of ideas as elements -- forerunner of
    mental chemistry notion

10
  • Simple and complex ideas
  • Simple arise from direct experience
  • Complex built up from simple
  • How do simple ideas combine? Why are some ideas
    picked out to become associated and others are
    not?
  • Natural connections (e.g., thunder and
    lightning) exist in nature
  • Rational connections made by the act of
    reflection. E.g., similar things tend to be
    associated
  • Contiguity e.g., (from Locke)adult has
    aversion to honey feels nauseous when looks at
    it. Explanation as child, had overdose of honey
    and vomited. Idea 1 (honey) and idea 2
    (vomiting) have become associated. No general
    connection in nature. This is, of course, a
    description of aversive conditioning
  • Locke probably missed point that Natural
    connections may be special case of contiguity
    principle
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