Online Encyclopedia

EPISTEMOLOGY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 701 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EPISTEMOLOGY  .(Gr . Einarip.oi, knowledge, and Aoyos, theory,

account; Germ . Erkenntnistheorie), in philosophy, a
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term applied, probably first by J . F . Ferrier, to that department of thought whose subject
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matter is the nature and origin of knowledge . It is thus contrasted with metaphysics, which considers the nature of reality, and with psychology, which deals with the objective
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part of cognition, and, as Prof . James Ward said, " is essentially genetic in its method " (Mind,
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April 1883, pp . 166-167) . Epistemology is concerned rather with the possibility of knowledge in the abstract (sub specie aeternitatis, Ward, ibid.) . In the
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evolution of thought epistemological inquiry succeeded the speculations of the early thinkers, who concerned themselves primarily with attempts to explain existence . The differences of opinion which arose on this problem naturally led to the inquiry as to whether any universally valid statement was possible . The Sophists and the Sceptics,
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Plato and Aristotle, the
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Stoics and the Epicureans took up the question, and from the time of Locke and Kant it has been prominent in
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modern philosophy .

It is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to draw a hard and fast

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line between epistemology and other branches of philosophy . If, for example, philosophy is divided into the theory of knowing and the theory of being, it is impossible entirely to
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separate the latter (Ontology) from the analysis of knowledge (Epistemology), so close is the connexion between the two . Again, the relation between logic in its widest sense and the theory of knowledge is extremely close . Some thinkers have identified the two, while others regard Epistemology as a subdivision of logic; others demarcate their relative spheres by confining logic to the science of the
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laws of thought, i.e. to formal logic . An attempt has been made by some philosophers to substitute " Gnosiology " (Gr. yvc o is) for " Epistemology " as a
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special term for that part of Epistemology which is
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con-fined to " systematic analysis of the conceptions employed by ordinary and scientific thought in interpreting the
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world, and including an investigation of the
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art of knowledge, or the nature of knowledge as such." " Epistemology " would thus be reserved for the broad questions of " the origin, nature and limits of knowledge " (Baldwin's
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Diet. of Philos. i. pp . 333 and 414) . The term Gnosiology has not, however, come into general use .

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