字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 When I wake up in the morning I know that the sky is going to be blue And that the sun will be shining The tweeting I hear are birds singing I know that when I go downstairs And feed my cat He will have four legs and will be ginger And that the big metal box with wheels outside my house is called a car But how do I know these things? How did I come to be of this knowledge? What allowed me to gain my concepts of Sky Sun Birds Cat and Car? There have originally been two schools of thought to how we come to be of knowledge Empiricism which argues that we gain all of our knowledge from experience And rationalism which argues that certain knowledge Can be gained just by reason and thinking British Philosopher John Locke Was an Empiricist and argued that when we are born Our minds are in the state of Tabula Rasa Which when translated to English Simply translates as blank slate But what does John Locke mean by this? Well John Locke was basically saying that when we are born Our minds are completely empty of all ideas and concepts And that as we start to experience things through our senses Such as touch taste sight sound and smell Our minds start to gain those ideas and concepts We are all familiar with For instance a new born baby might see a dog And therefore gain the concept of dog On top of this Locke says as our mind gains certain concepts It starts to group them together to form more complex concepts For example it may group the concepts of Cat Dog and Cow together To form the concept of animals Or group Box Wheels Motor together To form the concept of car This view on how we gain knowledge is supported by Scottish Philosopher And heavy pie eater David Hume Who says A blind man can form no notion of colours A deaf man of sounds Restore either of them that sense in which he is deficient By opening this new inlet for his sensations You also open an inlet for the ideas And he finds no difficulty in conceiving these objects This suggests that surely then our ideas can only come from our sense experience However rationalists would strongly disagree And instead argue that there is some knowledge That we can get without needing to have experienced anything For example a rationalist like Descartes Would argue that concepts such as mathematics Can be gained without experience He backs up this claim by saying that we can conceive the concept of a chiliagon A one thousand sided shape Without having experienced such an object Other mathematical concepts such as Square root equals and plus Also do not seem to have come from experience Implying that the Empiricist view that that all knowledge comes from sense experience is false Lastly we will have a look at another more modern view of how we gain knowledge Raised by German Philosopher Immanuel Kant Kant is neither an empiricist nor is he a rationalist Instead being German he created his own theory Kant argued that we are all born with certain innate concepts That allow us to make sense of the world The official term he gives to these are Predetermined conceptual schemes Kant argues that without these concepts our experiences would just be a unintelligible buzz of sensation To illustrate this point he gives the the analogy of a ship sailing down a river He says that if we looked at a ship sailing down a river Without the predetermined concept of casualty We would perceive the boat as a different object every time it moved And our perception of it changed It is only our concept of causality that we are born with That tells us that the boat is the same boat that we saw a few seconds ago up the river So what do you think? How did you become to know of things? Please leave your thoughts and ideas in the comments below Please tell us what philosopher or theory you would like next Remember that you can be kept updated on the latest news via our Twitter and Facebook feed And as always thank you for watching Total Philosophy
B1 中級 總哲學。認識論--我們如何獲得知識 (Total Philosophy: Epistemology - How we gain knowledge) 228 21 Precious Annie Liao 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字