The rise of scientific philosophy

the rise of scientific philosophy

  • By:Hans Reichenbach
  • ISBN:UOM:39015026754484
  • Publication Type: Univ Of California Press
  • Category: Philosophy
  • Condition:Good
  • No Of Pages:333
  • Specification:Vintage paperback
  • Release Date:
  • Price:Rs 650.00
  • Price
    Specifications
     
  • Rs650.00

    Vintage paperback

Description

This book represents a new approach to philosophy. It treats philosophy as not a collection of systems, but as a study of problems. It recognizes in traditional philosophical systems the historical function of having asked questions rather than having given solutions. Professor Reichenbach traces the failures of the systems to psychological causes. Speculative philosophers offered answers at a time when science had not yet provided the means to give true answers. Their search for certainty and for moral directives led them to accept pseudo-solutions. Plato, Descartes, Spinoza, Kant, and many others are cited to illustrate the rationalist fallacy: reason, unaided by observation, was regarded as a source of knowledge, revealing the physical world and "moral truth." The empiricists could not disprove this thesis, for they could not give a valid account of mathematical knowledge. Mathematical discoveries in the early nineteenth century cleared the way for modern scientific philosophy. Its advance was furthered by discoveries in modern physics, chemistry, biology, and psychology. These findings have made possible a new conception of the universe and of the atom. The work of scientists thus altered philosophy completely and brought into being a philosopher with a new attitude and training.

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