Top 10 similar words or synonyms for epistemological

epistemic    0.840028

epistemology    0.830787

dialectical    0.805378

holism    0.800275

empiricist    0.798907

metaphysical    0.795491

empiricism    0.790229

metaphysics    0.782129

ontic    0.779225

intentionality    0.774993

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for epistemological

Article Example
Epistemological psychology The inkling is presumed to trigger an affect which encapsulates and saturates all human experience. In everyday life, inklings induce detection either via human enactments (through habitual behavior) or through spontaneous devotion (conscious expression in the arts).
Epistemological Letters Those articles were therefore distributed in alternative publications, and "Epistemological Letters" became one of the main conduits. The newsletter was sent out by the "Association F. Gonseth, Institut de la Méthode", which had been established in honour of the philosopher (1890–1975). It described itself as "an open and informal journal allowing confrontation and ripening of ideas before publishing in some adequate journal." According to Clauser, it announced that the usual stigma against discussing certain ideas, such as hidden-variable theories, was to be absent.
Epistemological anarchism Furthermore, Feyerabend held that deciding between competing scientific accounts was complicated by the incommensurability of scientific theories. Incommensurability means that scientific theories cannot be reconciled or synthesized because the interpretation and practice of science is always informed by theoretical assumptions, which leads to proponents of competing theories using different terms, engaged in different language-games and thus talking past each other. This for Feyerabend was another reason why the idea of science as proceeding according to universal, fixed laws was both historically inaccurate and prescriptively useless.
Epistemological anarchism Terence McKenna was a fan of philosophers such as Feyerabend and Thomas Kuhn.
Epistemological rupture Bachelard proposed that the history of science is replete with "epistemological obstacles"—or unthought/unconscious structures that were immanent within the realm of the sciences, such as principles of division (e.g., mind/body). The history of science, Bachelard asserted, consisted in the formation and establishment of these epistemological obstacles, and then the subsequent tearing down of the obstacles. This latter stage is an epistemological rupture—where an unconscious obstacle to scientific thought is thoroughly ruptured or broken away from.