empiricismem‧pir‧i‧cis‧m /ɪmˈpɪrɪsɪzəm/ AWL noun [uncountable] - But there is another characteristic strand to foundationalism, that of empiricism.
- He noted that qualitative experience is lost when a reductionist empiricism seeks only quantitative generalizations.
- Indeed, they have been embarrassed by them, having so internalized the epistemological criteria of positivism, empiricism and pragmatism.
- It is bald assertion, based on what economists call casual empiricism.
- It is that the probabilistic idea is in accord with a kind of empiricism.
- It therefore rejected empiricism and was particularly critical of utilitarianism.
- It was the dawn of the age of empiricism.
- The distinction between rationalism and empiricism relates to a distinction between knowledge acquired by reason and knowledge acquired by the senses.
nounempiricismempiricistadjectiveempiricaladverbempirically