experience

philosophy and psychology

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defined by

    • Dewey
      • John Dewey
        In John Dewey: Being, nature, and experience

        In order to develop and articulate his philosophical system, Dewey first needed to expose what he regarded as the flaws of the existing tradition. He believed that the distinguishing feature of Western philosophy was its assumption that true being—that which is fully real or…

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    • Kant
    • Pragmatism
      • Charles Sanders Peirce, 1891.
        In pragmatism

        …of action over doctrine, of experience over fixed principles, and it holds that ideas borrow their meanings from their consequences and their truths from their verification. Thus, ideas are essentially instruments and plans of action.

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      • Charles Sanders Peirce, 1891.
        In pragmatism: Major theses of philosophic pragmatism

        …emphasizing the priority of actual experience over fixed principles and a priori (nonexperiential) reasoning in critical investigation. For James this meant that the pragmatist

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      • Charles Sanders Peirce, 1891.
        In pragmatism: Antecedents in modern philosophy

        …which stressed the role of experience in the genesis of knowledge—and particularly their analyses of belief as being intimately tied in with action and, indeed, as definable in terms of one’s disposition and motive to act. The work of the 18th-century empirical idealist George Berkeley, which presented a theory of…

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