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Webster 1913 Edition
epistemology
e-pisˊte-mol′o-gy
,Noun.
[Gr. [GREEK] knowledge +
-logy
.] The theory or science of the method or grounds of knowledge.
Definition 2024
epistemology
epistemology
English
Noun
epistemology (plural epistemologies)
- (uncountable) The branch of philosophy dealing with the study of knowledge; theory of knowledge, asking such questions as "What is knowledge?", "How is knowledge acquired?", "What do people know?", "How do we know what we know?".
- Some thinkers take the view that, beginning with the work of Descartes, epistemology began to replace metaphysics as the most important area of philosophy.
- 2014 April 12, Michael Inwood, “Martin Heidegger: the philosopher who fell for Hitler [print version: Hitler's philosopher]”, in The Daily Telegraph (Review), London, page R10:
- [P]hilosophers of the time [early 20th century] were primarily concerned with epistemology and the foundations of the sciences; they often spoke as if we were separated from the real world by a screen of "representations" or "sense-data"; they tended to regard our approach to the world as one of disinterested observation.
- (countable) A particular theory of knowledge.
- In his epistemology, Plato maintains that our knowledge of universal concepts is a kind of recollection.
- 1995, Colin McLarty, “Preface”, in Elementary Categories, Elementary Toposes, ISBN 0 19 851473 5, page vii:
- I believe that 'intuitionism' is usually, and rightly, taken to mean Brouwer's epistemology of mathematics, which is unrelated to the origin or content of topos theory.
Related terms
Related terms
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Translations
branch of philosophy dealing with the study of knowledge
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particular theory of knowledge
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