Ayer by now thought phenomenalism was unsuccessful in this attempt, and again reductionism would not work for the future cases. |
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Thus phenomenalism sought to reduce all statements to statements about immediately perceived sense-data. |
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Edwards' mental phenomenalism is a natural extension of his occasionalism and views on substance. |
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Another reason for Russell's reversion to realism was his recognition that the notion of causality is problematic for phenomenalism. |
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These ideologies exploit phenomenalism and theoreticism respectively, allowing neocolonialists to factualize literature and Japanese ultranationalists to fictionalize history. |
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To swear the sensory intermediaries or observation sentences into truthfulness then, one has to capitulate to sensationalism or phenomenalism and forget physicalism. |
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Similarly, the emphasis on the translation of concepts into measures is symptomatic of the principle of phenomenalism that is also a feature of positivism. |
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These ideologies exploit phenomenalism and theoreticism respectively, allowing neocolonialists to factualize literature and ultranationalists to fictionalize history. |
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According to de Man, ideology is the confusion of reference and phenomenalism, of representation and world, the forgetting of their difference. |
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Carnap's official phenomenalism was very ambitious and this brings out the point that the more substantive the base, the less interesting any scrutability thesis becomes. |
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Indeed, the movement remains today associated with a philosophy of science focused on verificationism, inductivism, phenomenalism, formalism, and the rejection of metaphysics. |
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Different philosophical trends as found in disciplines such as Nominalism, Realism, Phenomenalism, Significs, Semiotic, Logical Positivism, etc. |
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