REALITY, my n i g g a
Aristotle
The 1st philosopher to develop a system for studying the structure of logical reasoning
priori knowledge
knowledge justified independently of, or prior to, experience
George Berkeley
"The only reality is in the mind" Nothing exists if it is not perceived. Physical qualities projected on environment. Ideas are the only things we experience directly and are therefore the only things we can be sure of.
Isaac newton
1st person to claim that space was infinite
Hegel
Adgued that human thinking or reason is essentially determined by the forces of history
counter factual theory of causation
Analyzes causation in terms of what would have been the case if certain other things had been the case; that is, in terms of matters that are contrary to actual fact
Contemporary idealist
Argue that the physical properties of the world must ultimately be understood in terms of how they affect subjective experience
Dualists
Argue that there are 2 kinds of substances
Pluralists
Argue that there are many kinds of Substances
Monists
Argue that there is only one kind of substance
David Hume
Argued that people cannot make decisions without taste and sentiment
Brentano
Argued that physical phenomena do not exhibit intentionality
Aristotle
Argued that properties are real entities in their own right
Brentano
Argued that psychology should be based on a clear distinction between mental and physical phenomena. This would be found in the "intentionality" of the mental phenomena
Leibniz
Argued that space and time are constructions from the spatial and temporal relations between objects,and events, not entities in themselves
David Hume
Argued that the appearance of necessity derives merely from expectations induced by our experiences
Plato
Argued that the fundamentally real things are what he called the forms: ideal, eternal, unchanging types of things that exist outside the world of experience. Every day things in the world of experience have a lesser degree of reality
Heidegger
Argued that there could not be phenomenological reduction because there is no perspective from which one can give an account of the data of consciousness
Syllogism
Aristotle's argument attempting to classify examples of reasoning by their form alone
Leibniz
Believe that God chose to create our world out of an infinity of other possible worlds. He believed that since God is perfectly good, his reason for creating this world must have been a moral reason (God isn't real tho so he's retarded)
Plato
Believed in platonic forms
Aristotle
Believed in real things which he called substances which exist in the world around us
Husserl
Believed that the proper way to study the contents of the mind was by not assuming the real existence of anything outside the mind
Idealist
Claim that scientific theories and the reality they describe must ultimately be interpreted in mental terms
Aristotle
Distinguished between the actual the infinite, something that goes on forever, and the potentially infinite
Idealists
Leibniz, Berkeley, Kant, Hegel
Pragmatism
Locates the value of truth in the role that true beliefs have in making our actions succeed
McTaggart
R did the every event has the property of being past, present, and future at some time or another
Aristotle
Rejected forms and argued that individual things, called substances, are the fundamental realities
Aristotle
Said that the form of a substance is what makes a substance the thing it is; therefore is also called the essence of the substance
Isaac newton
Saw of space and time as real things, or the "containers" on which objects exist and events occur
Naturalist
Someone who thinks that the experimental methods of the natural sciences are the ways of acquiring true knowledge
Platonism
States that numbers must be real, non-physical things, located outside space and time
Parapsychology
States that the rest of science has ignored something in nature that genuinely Exists (the supernatural)
Materialism
The doctrine the everything is material
époché
The state of mind entered once reality of the world was bracketed (the husserl ***** came up with this)
Ontology
The study or theory of being
Phenomenology
The theory of appearance
Physicalism
The view that everything that exists is physical in the strict scientific sense, so that forces and fields exist on equal terms with matter itself
Minimalism
Theory of the truth that states that truth is not a substantial property or feature of beliefs and statements
Logicism
Theory states that mathematics applies to the world because the world is self has a logical structure
Formalism
Theory that States that mathematics is a matter of the conventions governing the use of certain symbols
Ockham's Razor
Theory that States that we should try to make and do with as few kinds of fundamental entity as possible in our theory of the world
Existentialism
Theory that rejected the husserlian notion of bracketing the existence of the world, since existence precedes essence
John Locke
Thought that the material objects have 2 kinds of qualities; primary qualities, such a shape and size, that objects have independently of perception; and secondary qualities, such as color or smell that are dependent on being perceived
David Hume
Was an empiricist and naturalist
Ontology
the branch of metaphysics dealing with the nature of being.
Empiricism
the view that knowledge originates in experience and that science should, therefore, rely on observation and experimentation