Mind - Active
- A mind that transforms, interprets, understands, or values physical experience - Rationalists assume that everyone has an active mind
Anomalies
- Observations that cannot be explained by existing paradigms - Eventually the paradigm has to be replaced
Determinism - Biological
- Stresses biochemical, genetic, physiological, or anatomical causes of behaviour
Laws - Causal
- Laws describing causal relationships - These laws outline the conditions that have to exist in order to produce a certain result - Knowledge of causal laws allows both the prediction and control of events
Confirmable Propositions
Propositions which can be validated by empirical tests
Laws - Correlational
- Laws describing relationships between empirical events - This does not mean that the events are causally related
Correspondence Theory of Truth
- Scientific laws and theories are correct as they accurately mirror events in the physical world
Determinism
- Everything that occurs does so because of known or knowable causes - If these causes are known in advance, events can be predicted with accuracy - If the causes of an event are known, the event can be prevented, by preventing its causes - Knowledge of an event's causes allows the prediction and control of the event
Double Aspectism
- Bodily and mental events are inseparable because they are two aspects of every experience.
Dualist
- There are two aspects to humans, one physical and one mental
Eclectic Approach
- Taking the best from a variety of viewpoints
Emergentism
- Mental processes emerge from brain processes
Empirical Observation
- Observing what you're studying in order to understand it
Empiricism
- The basis of all knowledge is experience
Determinism - Environmental
- The type of determinism that stresses causes of behaviour external to the organism
Epistemology
The study of the nature of knowledge
Paul Feyerabend
- Science cannot be described by rules, principles, or standards. - Scientific progress occurs when scientists violate whatever rules, principles, or standards existed at the time.
Approach - Great-Person
- Concentrates on the prominent contributors to a topic or field
Approach - Historical Development
- Concentrates on an element of a field or discipline and describes how the understanding or approach to studying that element has changed over time
Historicism
The study of the past for its own sake, without attempting to interpret and evaluate it in terms of current knowledge and standards, as is the case with presentism
Historiography
The study of the proper way to write history
Idealists
Those who believe that ultimate reality consists of ideas or perceptions and is therefore not physical
Determinism - Indeterminism
The contention that even though determinism is true, attempting to measure the causes of something influences those causes, making it impossible to know them with certainty. This contention is also called Heisenberg's uncertainty principle
Interactionism
A proposed answer to the mind-body problem maintaining that bodily experiences influence the mind and that mind influences the body
Irrationalism
Any explanation of human behaviour stressing determinants that are not under rational control (eg, emphasizing importance of emotions/unconscious mechanisms)
Thomas Kuhn
Believed that the activities of members of a scientific community are governed by a shared set of beliefs called a paradigm. This paradigmatic, or normal, science continues until an existing paradigm is displaced by another
Materialists
Those who believe that everything in the universe is material (physical), including those things that others refer to as mental.
Mechanism
The belief that the behaviour of organisms, including humans, can be explained entirely in terms of mechanical laws
Monists
Those who believe that there is only one reality. Materialists are monists because they believe that only matter exists. Idealists are also monists because they believe that everything, including the material world, is the result of human consciousness and is therefore mental.
Naive Realism
The belief that what one experiences mentally is the same as what is present physically
Nativist
Anyone who believes that important human attributes such as intelligence are largely inherited
Determinism - Nondeterminism
The belief that human thought or behaviour is freely chosen by the individual and is therefore not caused by antecedent physical or mental events.
Normal Science
According to Kuhn, the research activities performed by scientists as they explore the implication of a paradigm
Occasionalism
The belief that the relationship between the minf and the body is mediated by God
Paradigm
A viewpoint shared by many scientists while exploring the subject matter of their science. A paradigm determines what constitutes legitimate problems and the methodology used in solving those problems
Paradigmatic Stage
According to Kuhn, the stage in the development of a science during which scientific activity is guided by a paradigm. That is, it is during this stage that normal science occurs
Mind - Passive
- The mind simply reflects one's experiences with the physical world - Empiricists assume that everyone has passive minds
Determinism - Physical
- Stresses material causes of behaviour
Karl Popper
- Scientific methods have 3 parts: 1) Problems 2) Proposed solutions 3) Criticisms of the proposed solutions
Postdiction
- An attempt to account for something after it has occurred
Preestablished Harmony
- Bodily events and mental events are separate but correlated because run identical courses
Preparadigmatic Stage
- First stage in the development of a science - Characterized by warring factions vying to define the subject and methodology
Presentism
- Interpreting and evaluating historical events in terms of contemporary knowledge and standards
Principles of Falsifiability
- For a theory to be considered scientific,it must specify the observations that, if made, would refute the theory. - To be considered scientific, a theory must make risky predictions
Determinism - Psychical
- The type of determinism that stresses mental causes of behaviour
Psychophysical Parallelism
- Experiencing something in the physical world causes bodily and mental activity simultaneously - The two activities are independent of each other
Public Observation
- Scientific laws must be available for any interested person to observe - Science is interested in general, empirical relationships that are publicly verifiable
Puzzle Solving
- Normal science is like puzzle solving - Problems worked on are specified by a paradigm, the problems have solutions, and rules must be followed to arrive at those solutions
Rationalism
- Knowledge can be attained only by engaging in some type of systematic mental activity
Reification
- The belief that abstractions for which we have names have an existence independent of their names
Relativism
The belief that because all experience must be filtered though individual and group perspectives, the search for universal truths that exist independently of human experience must be in vain. For the relativist, there is no one truth, only truths
Revolutionary Stage
-Stage of scientific development during which an existing paradigm is displaced by a new one - Once the displacement is complete, the new paradigm generates normal science and continues doing so until it too is eventually displaced
Risky Predictions
- Predictions derived from a scientific theory that run a real chance of showing the theory to be false
Science
- Systematic attempt to categorize or explain empirical observations - Popper ---} A way of rigorously testing proposed solutions to problems
Laws - Scientific
- Consistently observed relationship between empirical events
Theory - Scientific
- Proposed explanation of empirical observations - According to Popper, a proposed solution to a problem
Determinism - Sociocultural
- The type of environmental determinism that stresses cultural or societal rules, customs, regulations, or expectations as the causes of behaviour.
Universalism
- There are universal truths about ourselves and the world around us that can be discovered by using the proper methods of inquiry
Vitalism
- Life cannot be explained in terms of inanimate processes - Life requires a force that is more than just the material objects or inanimate processes in which it manifests itself - Life requires a vital force
Zeitgeist
- The spirit of the times
Emergentism - Interactionist Form
- Once mental states emerge, they can influence subsequent brain activity and thus behaviour
Emergentism - Epiphenomentalist Form
- Emergent mental states are behaviourally irrelevant
Determinism - Types
1) Biological 2) Environmental 3) Indeterminism 4) Nondeterminism 5) Physical 6) Psychical 7) Sociocultural