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Empiricism - Coggle Diagram
Empiricism
John Locke´s
describes the mind
blank slate
from birth
enter a world of sensations
visuals
sounds
flavors
textures
smells
the experience
write on the blackboard
tabula rasa
the mind
at birth
is like a “blank slate”
has no innate ideas
all our ideas
come from experience
from simple sensations
form
simple ideas
combine
complex ideas
all ideas
originate from experience
discusses
degree of certainty
knowledge
the more it is based
knowledge
the greater your certainty
in experience
qualities
primary
qualities of the object
figure
mobility
solidity
extension
of who is perceived
secondary
qualities of the perceiver
like
texture
colors
sounds
flavors
George Berkeley
theory of immaterialism
said
existence
objects
depends
if they are perceived
we cannot claim
the existence of something
if it is not being perceived
qualities
primary
who perceives
secondary
argues
the object
would appear different
according to who perceives it
maintains
there is no material reality
what we know as
reality
is composed of
ideas
perceptions
means
objects have no existence
outside of being perceived
The empiricism
maintains
knowledge
acquires
sensory experiences
see
sound
tact
taste
smell
our
ideas
concepts
perceive
senses
no
is derived
reason
innate principles
empiricism thesis
all the
ideas
knowledge
come from
sensory experience
David Hume
said
we cannot rely on
our experiences
are subjective
are our perceptions
cannot
provide
knowledge
absolute
insurance
classifies
perceptions
printouts
perceptions
vivid
direct
with
sensations
emotions
passions
ideas
weak images
in
thinking
reasoning
difference
strike the mind
degree of
force
liveliness
all our ideas
are weak copies
sensory impressions
simple ideas
in its first appearance
derive
single prints
complex ideas
combinations of simple ideas