Chapter 5-Empiricism, Sensationalism, And Positivism Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of empiricism in the text, and what are its general characteristics?

A

It is the epistemology that asserts that the evidence of sense constitutes the primary data of all knowledge; that knowledge cannot exist in this evidence has first being gathered; and that all subsequent intellectual processes must use as evidence in only this evidence in framing valid propositions about the real world

Characteristics: sensory experience constitutes the primary data of all knowledge; it does not say that such experience alone constitutes knowledge

Knowledge cannot exist until sensory evidence has first being gathered; so for the empiricist, attaining knowledge begins with sensory experience.

All subsequent intellectual processes must focus on only sensory experience in formulating propositions about the world. Thus, it is not the recognition of mental processes that distinguishes the imperial system on the rationalist; rather, it is what those thought processes are focused on

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2
Q

Believed that the primary motive in human behavior is the seeking of pleasure and the avoidance of pain. The function of government is to satisfy as many human needs as possible and to prevent humans from fighting with each other. Believed that all human activity, including mental activity, could be reduced to atoms in motion; therefore, he was a materialist

A

Thomas Hobbes

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3
Q

Describe Hobbs position with respect to empiricism

A

Rejected Bacons inductive method in favor of the deductive method. Agreed with bacon on the importance of sensory experience. Excepted Descartes deductive method but rejected his concept of innate ideas. For Hobbs, all ideas came from experience or, more specifically, from sensory experience

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4
Q

Describe Hobbs position with respect to materialism

A

He was a materialist. Because all that exists is matter and motion, he thought it absurd to postulate a nonmaterial mind, as Descartes had done.

Also called mental phenomena could be explained by the sense experiences that result when the motion of external bodies stimulates the sense receptors, thereby causing internal motion. For Hobbs, the mind was nothing more than the sum total of a person’s thinking activities-that is, a series of motion is within the individual. He was a physical monist; he denied the existence of a nonmaterial mind

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5
Q

Describe Hobbs position with respect to psychological phenomena

A

Attention was explained by the fact that as long as sense organs retain the motion caused by certain external objects, they cannot respond to others

Imagination was explained by the fact that sense impressions decay overtime so imagination is nothing more but decaying sense

When a sense impression had decayed for a considerable amount of time, it is called memory

Dreams also have a sensory origin, the imaginations of them that sleep are those we call dreams the reason that they are typically so vivid is because during sleep there are no new sensory impressions to compete with the imagination

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6
Q

Describe Hobbs position with respect to motivation

A

External objects not only produce sense impressions but also influence the vital functions of the body. Those incoming impressions that facilitate vital functions are experienced as pleasurable, and the person seeks to preserve them or to seek them out. Conversely, since impressions incompatible with the vital functions are experienced as painful, and the person seeks to terminate or avoid them.

Human behavior is motivated by appetite the seeking are maintaining of pleasurable experience, and eversion the avoidance or termination of painful experiences. In other words, Hobbes accepted a hedonistic theory of motivation

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7
Q

Describe Hobbs position with respect to free will

A

With his deterministic view of human behavior, there was no place for free will. People may believe they are choosing because at any given moment they may be confronted with a number of appetite and aversions and therefore there may be conflicting tendencies to act. He referred to the recognition of such conflicting tendencies as deliberation and to the behavioral tendency that survives that deliberation as will.

Will was defined as the action tendency that prevails when a number of such tendencies exist simultaneously. What appears to be choice is nothing more than a verbal label we used to describe the attractions and aversions we experience while interacting with the environment

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8
Q

Describe Hobbs position with respect to complex thought processes

A

Hobbes attempted to explain trains of thought, by which he meant the tendency of one thought to follow another in some coherent manner. He introduced the law of contiguity first proposed by Aristotle. That is, events that are experienced together are remembered together and are subsequently thought of together.

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9
Q

And empiricist who denied the existence of innate ideas but who assumed many nativisticly determined powers of the mind. Distinguished between primary qualities, which cause sensations that correspond to actual attributes of physical bodies, and secondary qualities, which cause sensations that have no counterparts in the physical world. The types of ideas postulated by him included those caused by sensory stimulation, those caused by reflection, simple ideas, and complex ideas, which were composites of simple ideas

A

John Locke

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10
Q

Describe locks position on empiricism

A

He was an empiricist Who influenced most of the subsequent British empiricists, more so than Hobbs did

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11
Q

Describe locks position on the mind-body distinction

A

He rejected Hobbs physical monism and accepted a mind body dualism. Where is Hobbs equated mental images with the motions in the brain that were caused by external motions acting on the sense receptors, lock was content to say that somehow sensory stimulation caused ideas. He washed his hands of the question as to how something physical could cause something mental-it just did

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12
Q

Describe locks position on innate ideas

A

He was opposed to innate ideas, and because it was mainly clergymen who excepted the innateness of morality, by attacking the existence of innate ideas, he was attacking the church.

He observed that if the mind contained innate ideas, then all humans should have those ideas, and clearly they do not

The ideas that humans have come from experience according to Locke

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13
Q

Describe locks position on sensation and reflection

A

For lock, an idea was simply a mental image that could be employed while thinking.

All ideas come from either sensation or reflection, in other words ideas result either by direct sensory stimulation or by reflection on the remnants of prior sensory stimulation.

Thus, the source of all ideas is sensation, but the ideas obtained by sensation can be acted on and rearranged by the operations of the mind, thereby giving rise to new ideas

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14
Q

Describe locks position on simple and complex ideas

A

Simple ideas, whether from sensation or reflection, constitute the atoms or corpuscles of experience because they cannot be divided or analyzed further into other ideas

Complex ideas are composites of simple ideas and therefore can be analyzed into their component parts, or simple ideas.

When the operations of the mind are applied to simple ideas through reflection, complex ideas are formed

The mind can either create nor destroy ideas, but it can arrange existing ideas in an almost infinite number of configurations

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15
Q

Describe locks position on emotions

A

He maintained that the feelings of pleasure or pain accompanied both simple and complex ideas. The other passions or emotions such as love, desire, joy, hatred, sorrow, anger, fear, despair, envy, shame, and hope we’re all derived from the two basic feelings of pleasure and pain.

Things that cause pleasure are good, and things that cause pain are evil. The greatest good was the freedom to think pleasurable thoughts.

Therefore, like Hobbs, his theory of human motivation was hedonistic

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16
Q

Describe locks position on primary and secondary qualities

A

Primary and secondary qualities referred to characteristics of the physical world; what distinguish them was the type of psychological experience they caused.

Following Boyle, lock referred to any aspect of a physical object that had the power to produce an idea as a quality. Primary qualities have the power to create in us ideas that correspond to actual physical attributes of physical objects-for example, the ideas of solidity, extension, shape, motion or rest, and quantity. With primary qualities, there is a match between what is physically present and what is experienced psychologically

The secondary qualities of objects also have the power to produce ideas, but the ideas they produce do not correspond to anything in the physical world. The ideas produced by secondary qualities include those of color, sound, temperature, and taste

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17
Q

The rudimentary mental experience that results from the stimulation of one or more sense receptors

A

Sensation

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18
Q

According to lock, the ability to use the powers of the mind to creatively rearrange ideas derived from sensory experience

A

Reflection

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19
Q

The mental remnants of sensations

A

Simple ideas

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20
Q

Configurations of simple ideas

A

Complex ideas

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21
Q

According to lock, that aspect of a physical object that has the power to produce an idea

A

Quality

22
Q

Locks observation that warm water will feel either hot or cold depending on whether a hand is first placed in hot water or cold water. Because water cannot be hot and cold at the same time, temperature must be a secondary, not a primary, quality

A

Paradox of the basins

23
Q

Describe locks position on Association of ideas

A

He used association to explain the faulty beliefs that can result from accidents of time or circumstance. He called the belief that resulted from associative learning a degree of madness because they were in opposition to reason.

In addition to ideas that are clustered in the mind because of some logical connection among them, some ideas are naturally associated, such as when the owner of baking bread causes one to have the idea of bread. The types of associations that constitute a degree of madness are learned by chance, custom, or mistake. These associations lead to errors in understanding, whereas natural associations cannot

Example of an unreasonable belief: a person who eats too much honey become sick and thereafter avoids even the thought of honey, or a person undergoing painful surgery will develop and aversion to the surgeon

24
Q

The believe that the laws of association provide the fundamental principles by which all mental phenomena can be explained

A

Associationism

25
Q

Describe locks position on education

A

His book had a profound and long lasting influence on education throughout the Western world

By insisting that nurture or experience, was much more important than nature, or innate ability, for character development, his views on education were in accordance with his empirical philosophy.

Important education took place both at home and at school. He encouraged parents to increased stress tolerance in their children through a process he called hardening, by having them sleep on hard rather than soft beds. Exposing children to moderate amounts of coldness and wetness would also increase tolerance for the inevitable hardships of life. Crying should be discouraged with physical punishment if necessary. Parents should provide their children with sufficient sleep, food, fresh air, and exercise because good Health and effective learning are inseparable

In the classroom, mild physical punishment of students was advocated but severe physical punishment was not because of learning occurs under aversive conditions, it will be avoided both in school and beyond

26
Q

Describe locks position on government

A

Because he did not believe in innate ideas or innate moral principles, he did not believe that people should seek the truth for themselves rather than having it imposed on them. For this and other reasons, empiricism was considered to be a radical movement that sought to replace religion based on revelation with natural law. He proposed a government by and for the people and was accepted enthusiastically by the 19 century utilitarians, and it was influential in the drafting of the US Declaration of Independence

27
Q

Describe Berkeleys ideas with respect to his theory of distance perception

A

Offered an empirical explanation of the perception of distance, saying that we learn to associate the sensations caused by the convergence and divergence of the eyes with different distances

Believe that a person who was born blind and was later able to see would not be able to distinguish a cube from a triangle because such discrimination requires the association of visual and tactile experiences and such a person would also be incapable of perceiving distance because many sensations must be associated to judge the proper distance of an object.

The cues for distance are learned through the process of association

28
Q

Disagreed with his father James that all complex ideas could be reduced to simple ideas. Proposed the process of mental chemistry according to which complex ideas could be distinctly different from the simple ideas, or elements, that constituted them. Believed strongly that a science of human nature could be and should be developed

A

John Stuart Mill

29
Q

The belief that the best society or government is one that provides the greatest good or happiness for the greatest number of individuals

A

Utilitarianism

30
Q

The process by which individuals sensations can combine to form a new sensation that is different from any of the individual sensations that constitute it

A

Mental chemistry

31
Q

Describe Jon Stewart Mills philosophy with respect to mental chemistry

A

He believed that every sensation leaves in the mind an idea that resembles the sensation but is weaker in intensity; that similar ideas tends to excite one another; when sensations or ideas are frequently experienced together, either simultaneously or successively, they become associated-law of contiguity; more vivid sensations or ideas for him stronger associations then do less vivid ones; The strength of association varies with frequency of occurrence

He took issue with his father on one important issue, however, instead of agreeing that complex ideas are always aggregates of simple ideas, he proposed a type of mental chemistry. Similar to how chemicals often combine and produce something entirely different from the elements that made them up, he believed that the same kind of thing sometimes happens in the mind. That it was possible for elementary ideas to fuse and to produce an idea that was different from the elements that made it up

32
Q

Describe Jon Stewart Mills philosophy with respect to psychology as a science

A

He was perhaps the most respected philosopher of science of his day and who contributed most to the development of psychology as a science.

Attacked the common belief that human thoughts, feelings, and actions are not subject to scientific investigation in the same way that physical nature is. He stressed to the point that any system governed by laws is subject to scientific scrutiny, and this is true even if those laws are not presently understood.

Sciences can range from those whose laws are known and the manifestations of those laws easily and precisely measured (primary laws) to those whose laws are only partially understood and the manifestations of those laws measured only with great difficulty (secondary laws)

33
Q

Describe John Stuart Mill philosophy with respect to ethology

A

Argued for the development of a science of the formation of character and he called this science ethology. Bears little resemblance to modern ethology which studies animal behavior in the animals natural habitat and then attempts to explain that behavior in evolutionary terms.

34
Q

John Stewart Mills proposed study of how specific individuals act under specific circumstances. In other words, it is the study of how the primary laws governing human behavior interact with secondary laws to produce an individual’s behavior in a situation

A

Ethology

35
Q

Describe John Stewart Mills philosophy with respect to social reform

A

He was a dedicated social reformer like his father and his causes included freedom of speech, representative government, and the emancipation of women. He embraced utilitarianism.

36
Q

Believe humans were machines that differed from other animals only in complexity. Believed that so-called mental experiences are nothing but movements of particles in the brain. He also believed that accepting materialism would result in a better, more humane world

A

Julien de La Mettrie

37
Q

Describe La Mettrie’s views concerning man as a machine

A

Believed that if Descartes had followed his own mechanist method, he would have reached the conclusion that humans, like nonhuman animals, we’re automated machines.

He believe that man was a machine, and that in the whole universe there is but a single substance differently modified. The single substance was matter, and this belief that every existing thing, including humans, consists of matter and nothing else makes him a physical monist. The existence of an immaterial soul was silly.

38
Q

Describe La Mettrie’s views concerning The differences between humans and nonhuman animals

A

Intelligence was influenced by three factors: brain size, bring complexity, and education. Humans are typically superior in intelligence two other animals because we have bigger, more complex brains and because we are better educated.

Humans differ from nonhuman animals only in degree, not in type

39
Q

Describe La Mettrie’s views concerning The desirability of accepting materialism as a worldview

A

He believes that the uniqueness of humans, dualism, and in God are not only incorrect but also responsible for widespread misery. Humans would be much better served by accepting their continuity with the animal world. We should accept the fact that, like other animals, humans are machines

Believe that accepting materialism would result in a better, more humane world

40
Q

The almost religious belief that science can answer all questions and solve all problems

A

Scientism

41
Q

The founder of positivism and coiner of the term sociology. He felt that cultures passed through three stages in the way they explained phenomena: the theological, the metaphysical, and the scientific

A

Auguste Comte

42
Q

Describe Comte’s beliefs regarding positivism

A

The only thing we can be sure of is that which is publicly observable-that is, sense experiences that can be shared with other individuals. The data of science are publicly observable and therefore can be trusted.

His insistence on equating knowledge with empirical observations was called positivism

43
Q

Describe Comte’s beliefs regarding The law of three stages

A

Societies passed through stages that are defined in terms of the way its members explain natural events:

Theological-the first and most primitive stage where explanations are based on superstition and mysticism

Metaphysical-explanations are based on unseen essences, principles, causes, or laws

Scientific-description is emphasized over explanation, and the prediction and control of natural phenomena becomes all important. During this stage, positivism is accepted

44
Q

For Comte, A study of the types of explanations various societies accepted for natural phenomena. He believed that, as societies progress, they go from theological explanations, to metaphysical, to positivistic. He also meant the study of the overt behavior of humans, especially social behavior

A

Sociology

45
Q

Describe Comte’s beliefs regarding humanistic religion

A

He discussed positivism as if it were religion. To him, science was all that one needed to believe in and all that one should believe in and he described a utopian society based on scientific principles and beliefs and whose organization was remarkably similar to the Roman Catholic Church. However, humanity replaced God, and scientists and philosophers replaced priests. Disciples of the new religion would be drawn from the working classes and especially from among women.

46
Q

Describe Comte’s beliefs regarding The hierarchy of the sciences

A

Arrange the scientists in a hierarchy from the first developed and most basic to the last developed and most comprehensive as follows: mathematics, astronomy, physics, chemistry, physiology and biology, and sociology. Psychology did not appear on his list of sciences. He believe that psychology was metaphysical nonsense because science can only deal with what could be publicly observed and that excludes introspective data.

Two methods could be used to study the individual objectively: phrenology and to study the mind by its products such as overt behavior and social behavior

47
Q

Proposed a brand of positivism based on the phenomenological experiences of scientists. Because scientists, or anyone else, never experiencea physical world directly, the scientists job is to precisely describe the relationships among mental phenomena, and to do so without the aid of metaphysical speculation

A

Ernst Mach

48
Q

Compare and contrast the positivism of Comte and Mach.

A

Mock, like COM T, insisted that science concentrate only on what could be known with certainty. Neither allowed metaphysical speculation in their views of science. The two men differed radically in what they thought scientists could be certain about: for Conti, it was physical events that could be experienced by any interested observer. Mock, however, agreed with the contention of Berkeley and Hume-that we can never experience the physical world directly we experience only sensations or mental phenomena. For mock, the job of the scientist was to note with which sensations typically clustered together and to describe imprecise mathematical terms the relationships among them

He concluded that so-called cause and effect relationships are nothing more than functional relationships among mental phenomena. The ultimate subject matter of any science was necessarily cognitive, and this fact need not prevent scientists from doing their work objectively and without engaging in metaphysical speculation

49
Q

How did Mach Believe that concept should be defined?

A

Insisted that scientific concepts be defined in terms of the procedures used to measure them rather in terms of their ultimate reality or essence. Anticipated the concept of operational definition.

50
Q

The belief that all knowledge is derived from experience, especially sensory experience

A

Empiricism