Tabula Rasa - created from Mind Map

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A Levels (Reason and Experience) Philosophy Apunte sobre Tabula Rasa - created from Mind Map, creado por rlshindmarsh el 15/04/2014.
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Locke without the corresponding sense experiences, words are meaningless, so any idea without a direct link to any sense experience should be regarded with suspicion an not taken seriously coined Tabula Rasa

Hume HUME'S FORK Strong empiricism similarly to Locke, metaphysical ideas are not actually ideas merely 'sophistry and illusion' Relations of Ideas - analytic truths(tautology) Matters of Fact and Real Existence - synthetic thruths(knowledge) justification - the blind man and the concept of red Explanation of Ideas - The Golden Mountain

Strengths initially intuative Without language, which we learn through sense experience in interaction with others, we have no clarity of thought and cannot relate complex ideas to one another imagination initially appears to be explainable via deconstruction of concepts of previous sense impressions i.e. golden mountain.

Weaknessess there is no direct experience of the world as such - only direct experience of sense data we can never know if every individual truly shares the same sense impressions, as we can never experience anyone else's perception we can conceive of a missing shade of blue but there is no sure way we can trace this back to experience some metaphysical or fantastical ideas are too complex to be broken down into simpler concepts easily - a unicorn sense impressions are not necessary for ideas the idea that sense experience stimulates ideas is not the same as ideas being copies of sense impressions Certain logical conclusions such as 'X cannot be X and not X at the same time' seem to have no basis in sense experience Words are not just labels nothing about experience itself teaches us how to judge it - 'this is tove' therefore we cannot assume that what we are experiencing is an accurate representation of the world, of there even is a physical external world to represent in the first place. Words represent ideas - ideas - sense impressions represent themselves(after scepticism) and not necessarily any external world. in other words, my words stand for my sense impressions and no one else's COUNTER could lead to solipsism COUNTER Hume admits this is the exception to the rule when exchanging ideas (which supposedly stand for sense impressions, which are exclusive) sense impressions can play no part in the concepts. our understanding of the same language, not shared sense impressions, is what allows us to communcaite effectively Liebniz's example of viened marble rather than a blank slate

Logical Positivism - the Vienna circle The Verification Principle - a proposition is verified if it satisfies one of two criteria: It is analytically true A statement that can be varified by experience Problem: the verification principle itself cannot be varified

Plato - knowledge is justified true belief

important distinction between IMPRESSIOnS and CONCEPTS if I am sitting and drinking tea I can be said to have a sensory impression of it: I can smell, touch and taste it and be aware that the thing I am sensing is tea I can be said to have a concept of tea when I can think about it whilst not actually being in its presence

a potential counter to this is that we must have some kind of pre-existing capacity to learn language, this is resolved by Kant's theory of Conceptual Schemes

Tabula Rasa

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