Nghĩa của từ epistemological bằng Tiếng Anh

adjective

relating to the study of human knowledge and cognition, of epistemology

Đặt câu với từ "epistemological"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "epistemological", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ epistemological, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ epistemological trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh

1. D Epistemological Adaptationism 7

2. Philosophical Anarchisms, Moral and Epistemological - Volume 20 Issue 1 - Mark C

3. Apriorism; however, his critics have typically appraised Mises’ Apriorism along the epistemological dimension

4. Most of his works revolve around science, history and religion, analysed under an epistemological light.

5. Constructivist approaches refer to an epistemological position in which knowledge is regarded as constructed

6. On Body politics that examines epistemological and/or empirical accounts of bodily differ-ence broadly defined

7. American Anatomies takes the long view: What epistemological frameworks allowed the West, from the Renaissance forward, to schematize racial and gender differences and to create social hierarchies based on these differences? How have those epistemological regimes changed—and not changed—over time?

8. To begin, Constructionism is an epistemological position in which individuals view knowledge as permeable and created through direct experience; …

9. 22 Indeed, they have been embarrassed by them, having so internalized the epistemological criteria of positivism, empiricism and pragmatism.

10. [7] However, epistemologists combine Contextualism with views about what knowledge is to address epistemological puzzles and issues, such as skepticism, the

11. 29 Under the guidance of the epistemological principle of seeking to mediate rationalism and experientialism, Leibniz put forward the theory of two kinds of truth.

12. This special edition of Politics, Groups, and Identities includes innovative scholarship on Body politics that examines epistemological and/or empirical accounts of bodily difference broadly defined

13. For the author though, Confabulation is a process that cannot only be studied empirically, but can also be connected with epistemological issues in philosophy

14. What these Cults share is a belief in a millenarian struggle in which the faithful sweep away the wicked, and an epistemological certainty that makes debate impossible

15. With the epistemological advance in field of aging research, the gerontologist has recognized that the aging mechanism is a negative and stochastic process rather than active or programmed one.

16. Constructivism is an epistemological belief about what "knowing" is and how one "come to know." Contructivists believe in individual interpretations of the reality, i.e

17. Moreover, the explanation provides an insight into the social functions of knowledge Ascriptions as well as a methodological lesson about the relationship between folk epistemology and epistemological theorizing.

18. ‘Hume's analysis has been interpreted as reinforcing Baconian inductivism, a tradition that perhaps owes as much to Hume's epistemological investigations as to the counsel of Francis Bacon himself.’

19. From the perspective of dialectic materialism as a method and epistemological positioning the following is concluded: the package of the green revolution left the process of agrarian salary distribution unresolved.

20. Against the "rational capacity", "Conventionalist", Kantian and early Wittgensteinian views, other philosophers, especially radical empiricists and naturalists (not to speak of epistemological skeptics), have rejected the claim that a priori knowledge exists (hence by implication also the claim that analytic

21. Writing from the position of an engaged subject formed by the epistemological regime he desires to reconstitute, Moxey invokes Michel Foucault (as well as Roland Barthes, Judith Butler, and Joan Scott), Avowing that the production of knowledge originates in discursive practices that are culturally embedded and constitutive of cultural meaning.

22. Sites are both false (i.e., the propositional Binegation 'neither P nor not-P' is true)» My point here is that just this ambiguity of dialetheias is essen-tial for understanding the "middle way" of Cusanus —the way directed by his basic epistemological insight and maxim: doeta ignorantia

23. Epistemological Constructivism is the philosophical view, as described above, that our knowledge is "constructed" in that it is contingent on convention, human perception and social experience.; Social Constructivism (or Social Constructionism) is the theory in Sociology and Learning Theory that categories of knowledge and reality are actively created by social relationships and interactions.

24. Sites are both false (i.e., the propositional Binegation 'neither P nor not-P' is true).13 My point here is that just this ambiguity of dialetheias is essen-tial for understanding the "middle way" of Cusanus - the way directed by his basic epistemological insight and maxim: docta ignorantia

25. Aspects of what one of the (in)Augurists has termed the epistemological unconscious, founding not only these particular addresses, or merely the learned, scholastic treatises in a broader context, but also the material and symbolic acts taking place every day in the routine undertakings of modern as well as primitive societies

26. Contextualism is the epistemological thesis that holds context to significantly affect the truth value of claims such as “S knows that p.” A shift in context can lead to a shift in the standards by which we evaluate propositional knowledge claims, and thus a shift in the truth values of these claims: a statement “S knows that p” may be true when evaluated in one context while