Epistemological definition

Epistemological means of that branch of philosophy which investigates the origin, nature, methods, and limits of human knowledge.

Examples of Epistemological in a sentence

  • The Marginalization of African Indigenous Healing Traditions within Western Medicine: Reconciling Ideological Tensions & Contradictions along the Epistemological Terrain.

  • Exploring Students’ Epistemological Knowledge of Models and Modelling in Science: Results From a Teaching/Learning Experience on Climate Change.

  • Disciplinarity and the Rhetoric of Science: A Social Epistemological Reception Study.

  • The Basis of Distinction Between Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Social Science: Reflection on Ontological, Epistemological and Methodological Perspectives.

  • Different Epistemological, Logical and Methodological Paths of Knowledge Production].

  • I will deal with this subject in detail in Chapter 2: Two Pivotal Epistemological Paradigm Changes.

  • On the Normative Force of the Historicity of Science 1 Chapter Two – The Immanence of the Intelligence: ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ and the Progressive Intelligibility of the Real 101 Chapter Three – Mathematics as Experience: ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ and the Dialectical Philosophy of the Concept 221 Chapter Four – ▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇▇’▇ Normative Epistemological Program and the History of Science 387 Conclusion – The Uses of the History of Science for Philosophy 463 Bibliography 485 Figure 4.

  • German Indology and Ethnology in the Epistemological Battlefield of the Nineteenth Century.” In Sanskrit and Orientalism: Indology and Comparative Linguistics in Germany, 1750-1958.

  • And, of course, knowledge of the things of ‘this world’, of the natural order precedes any theoretical invocation of forces and realities transcendent to it.317 313 Taylor, “Merleau-Ponty and the Epistemological Picture,” 27-8.

  • As he writes elsewhere, “Knowledge of things outside the mind/agent/organism only comes through certain surface conditions, mental images, or conceptual schemes within the mind/agent/organism The input is combined, computed over, or structured by the mind to construct a view of what lies outside.” Taylor, “Merleau-Ponty and the Epistemological Picture,” 27.