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experience |
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experience, living through events and the impression on a person or animal of events. In epistemology, a distinction is made between things known inductively, from experience, and those known deductively or theoretically, from a priori principles. The ancients, under the influence of Plato and of Euclidean geometry, tended to prize deductive or theoretical knowledge above that gained through experience. Their influence was dominant through the Renaissance. With the rise of modern empirical science the preference was reversed. Immanuel Kant's critical epistemology, however, emphasized the dependence of all experience on the mediation of the intelligence. Modern thought has tended to agree with Kant; accordingly, discussion has centered on what, if anything, can be said to be immediately experience, and how this experience may be conditioned by social factors affecting the social milieu or by perceptual processes themselves. experience Philosophy a. the content of a perception regarded as independent of whether the apparent object actually exists b. the faculty by which a person acquires knowledge of contingent facts about the world, as contrasted with reason c. the totality of a person's perceptions, feelings, and memories How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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This strategy attempts to avoid long-time academic debates on whether religion is a "sui generis" phenomenon or purely a "naturalistic" phenomenon, while it also seeks to preserve the integrity of the experiences and the experiencers being examined. The concrete experiencers also reach for a few pieces, although more cautiously than the active experimenters, preferring to feel their way through the task. Since experiencers are fundamental to Crane, as moral agents we have ethical obligations toward humans as well as other experiencers. |
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