empiricist|empiricists in English

noun

[em'pir·i·cist || -ɪsɪst]

one who supports empiricism, one who favors learning based on observation and experience

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "empiricist|empiricists" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "empiricist|empiricists", or refer to the context using the word "empiricist|empiricists" in the English Dictionary.

1. Well, the classic empiricist answer is induction.

2. Some empiricist theory accounts today use behaviorist models.

3. Philosophy functioning for some empiricists as the Explanation of Abstracted

4. 5 For empiricists, revisionism is no heresy; and heresy no bad thing, anyway.

5. Associationism as a general philosophy of mind arguably reached its pinnacle in the work of the British Empiricists

6. Statistical language acquisition, which falls under empiricist theory, suggests that infants acquire language by means of pattern perception.

7. He was a dyed-in-the-wool empiricist in the manner of Bacon, Locke, Kames, and Hume and lack of Acquaintancy with philosophical empiricism often leads to …

8. Theorists, as Benevolist attitudes began to infiltrate religious thought, as empiricist philosophy increasingly designated the human subject as the locus both of psychic and of referential truth, new terms in keeping with these individualist traditions gradually evolved to accommodate the

9. He was a dyed-in-the-wool empiricist in the manner of Bacon, Locke, Kames, and Hume and lack of Acquaintancy with philosophical empiricism often leads to egregious errors—especially when it comes to apprehension of Jefferson’s views …

10. Against the "rational capacity", "Conventionalist", Kantian and early Wittgensteinian views, other philosophers, especially radical empiricists and naturalists (not to speak of epistemological skeptics), have rejected the claim that a priori knowledge exists (hence by implication also the claim that analytic

11. Although the term Constructivism is used as a label for an important movement in art history (as in Russian Constructivism), Constructivism in the social sciences refers to a distinctive approach to theory and research that is opposed to the dominant empiricist, naturalist, and realist frameworks of mainstream social thought.

12. ‘Some neo-positivists cannot forgive him for his anti-positivism, and some empiricists cannot be patient with his Apriorism.’ ‘Indeed, I spent a considerable amount of time during my post-doc year studying Austrian economics at NYU trying to convince a number of Austrians to abandon their commitment to Apriorism.’

13. That is, unlike the empiricists who rejected knowledge of things as they are in themselves (in favour of knowledge merely of what appears to the senses), to think we can have a priori knowledge, knowledge of a world external from our sense perceptions, and, further, that this is tantamount to knowledge of God.