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Philosophical realism

Philosophical realism – usually not treated as a position of its own but as a stance towards other subject matters – is the view that a certain kind of thing (ranging widely from abstract objects like numbers to moral statements to the physical world itself) has mind-independent existence, i.e. that it exists even in the absence of any mind perceiving it or that its existence is not just a mere appearance in the eye of the beholder.[1][2][3][4] This includes a number of positions within epistemology and metaphysics which express that a given thing instead exists independently of knowledge, thought, or understanding.[5][6] This can apply to items such as the physical world, the past and future, other minds, and the self, though may also apply less directly to things such as universals, mathematical truths, moral truths, and thought itself. However, realism may also include various positions which instead reject metaphysical treatments of reality entirely.[7][8]

Realism can also be a view about the properties of reality in general, holding that reality exists independent of the mind, as opposed to non-realist views (like some forms of skepticism and solipsism) which question the certainty of anything beyond one's own mind. Philosophers who profess realism often claim that truth consists in a correspondence between cognitive representations and reality.[9]

Realists tend to believe that whatever we believe now is only an approximation of reality but that the accuracy and fullness of understanding can be improved.[10] In some contexts, realism is contrasted with idealism. Today it is more often contrasted with anti-realism, for example in the philosophy of science.[11][12]

The oldest use of the term "realism" appeared in medieval scholastic interpretations and adaptations of ancient Greek philosophy.

Etymology edit

The term comes from Late Latin realis "real" and was first used in the abstract metaphysical sense by Immanuel Kant in 1781 (CPR A 369).[13]

Varieties edit

Metaphysical realism edit

Metaphysical realism maintains that "whatever exists does so, and has the properties and relations it does, independently of deriving its existence or nature from being thought of or experienced."[14] In other words, an objective reality exists (not merely one or more subjective realities).

Naive or direct realism edit

Naive realism, also known as direct realism, is a philosophy of mind rooted in a common sense theory of perception that claims that the senses provide us with direct awareness of the external world. In contrast, some forms of idealism assert that no world exists apart from mind-dependent ideas and some forms of skepticism say we cannot trust our senses. The naive realist view is that objects have properties, such as texture, smell, taste and colour, that are usually perceived absolutely correctly. We perceive them as they really are.

Immanent realism edit

Immanent realism is the ontological understanding which holds that universals are immanently real within particulars themselves, not in a separate realm, and not mere names. Most often associated with Aristotle and the Aristotelian tradition.

Scientific realism edit

Scientific realism is, at the most general level, the view that the world described by science is the real world, as it is, independent of what we might take it to be. Within philosophy of science, it is often framed as an answer to the question "how is the success of science to be explained?" The debate over what the success of science involves centers primarily on the status of unobservable entities apparently talked about by scientific theories. Generally, those who are scientific realists assert that one can make reliable claims about unobservables (viz., that they have the same ontological status) as observables. Analytic philosophers generally have a commitment to scientific realism, in the sense of regarding the scientific method as a reliable guide to the nature of reality. The main alternative to scientific realism is instrumentalism.[15]

Scientific realism in physics edit

Realism in physics (especially quantum mechanics) is the claim that the world is in some sense mind-independent: that even if the results of a possible measurement do not pre-exist the act of measurement, that does not require that they are the creation of the observer (contrary to the "consciousness causes collapse" interpretation of quantum mechanics). That interpretation of quantum mechanics, on the other hand, states that the wave function is already the full description of reality. The different possible realities described by the wave function are equally true. The observer collapses the wave function into their own reality. One's reality can be mind-dependent under this interpretation of quantum mechanics.

Moral realism edit

Moral realism is the position that ethical sentences express propositions that refer to objective features of the world.

Aesthetic realism edit

Aesthetic realism (not to be confused with Aesthetic Realism, the philosophy developed by Eli Siegel, or "realism" in the arts) is the view that there are mind-independent aesthetic facts.[16][17]

History of metaphysical realism edit

Ancient Greek philosophy edit

 
Plato (left) and Aristotle (right), a detail of The School of Athens, a fresco by Raphael. In Plato's metaphysics, ever-unchanging Forms, or Ideas, exist apart from particular physical things, and are related to them as their prototype or exemplar. Aristotle's philosophy of reality also aims at the universal. Aristotle finds the universal, which he calls essence, in the commonalities of particular things.

In ancient Greek philosophy, realist doctrines about universals were proposed by Plato and Aristotle.[18]

Platonic realism is a radical form of realism regarding the existence of abstract objects, including universals, which are often translated from Plato's works as "Forms". Since Plato frames Forms as ideas that are literally real (existing even outside of human minds), this stance is also called Platonic idealism. This should not be confused with "idealistic" in the ordinary sense of "optimistic" or with other types of philosophical idealism, as presented by philosophers such as George Berkeley. As Platonic abstractions are not spatial, temporal, or subjectively mental, they are arguably not compatible with the emphasis of Berkeley's idealism grounded in mental existence. Plato's Forms include numbers and geometrical figures, making his theory also include mathematical realism; they also include the Form of the Good, making it additionally include ethical realism.

In Aristotle's more modest view, the existence of universals (like "blueness") is dependent on the particulars that exemplify them (like a particular "blue bird", "blue piece of paper", "blue robe", etc.), and those particulars exist independent of any minds: classic metaphysical realism.

Medieval philosophy edit

Medieval realism developed out of debates over the problem of universals.[19] Universals are terms or properties that can be applied to many things, such as "red", "beauty", "five", or "dog". Realism (also known as exaggerated realism) in this context, contrasted with conceptualism and nominalism, holds that such universals really exist, independently and somehow prior to the world. Moderate realism holds that they exist, but only insofar as they are instantiated in specific things; they do not exist separately from the specific thing. Conceptualism holds that they exist, but only in the mind, while nominalism holds that universals do not "exist" at all but are no more than words (flatus vocis) that describe specific objects.

Proponents of moderate realism included Thomas Aquinas, Bonaventure, and Duns Scotus (cf. Scotist realism).[20]

Early modern philosophy edit

In early modern philosophy, Scottish Common Sense Realism was a school of philosophy that sought to defend naive realism against philosophical paradox and scepticism, arguing that matters of common sense are within the reach of common understanding and that common-sense beliefs even govern the lives and thoughts of those who hold non-commonsensical beliefs. It originated in the ideas of the most prominent members of the Scottish School of Common Sense, Thomas Reid, Adam Ferguson and Dugald Stewart, during the 18th century Scottish Enlightenment and flourished in the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Scotland and America.

The roots of Scottish Common Sense Realism can be found in responses to such philosophers as John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume. The approach was a response to the "ideal system" that began with Descartes' concept of the limitations of sense experience and led Locke and Hume to a skepticism that called religion and the evidence of the senses equally into question. The common sense realists found skepticism to be absurd and so contrary to common experience that it had to be rejected. They taught that ordinary experiences provide intuitively certain assurance of the existence of the self, of real objects that could be seen and felt and of certain "first principles" upon which sound morality and religious beliefs could be established. Its basic principle was enunciated by its founder and greatest figure, Thomas Reid:[21]

If there are certain principles, as I think there are, which the constitution of our nature leads us to believe, and which we are under a necessity to take for granted in the common concerns of life, without being able to give a reason for them—these are what we call the principles of common sense; and what is manifestly contrary to them, is what we call absurd.

Late modern philosophy edit

In late modern philosophy, a notable school of thought advocating metaphysical realism was Austrian realism. Its members included Franz Brentano,[22] Alexius Meinong,[22] Vittorio Benussi,[22] Ernst Mally,[23] and early Edmund Husserl.[22] These thinkers stressed the objectivity of truth and its independence of the nature of those who judge it.[24] (See also Graz School.)

Dialectical materialism, a philosophy of nature based on the writings of late modern philosophers Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, is interpreted to be a form of ontological realism.[25]

According to Michael Resnik, Gottlob Frege's work after 1891 can be interpreted as a contribution to realism.[26]

Contemporary philosophy edit

In contemporary analytic philosophy, Bertrand Russell,[27] Ludwig Wittgenstein,[28] J. L. Austin,[29] Karl Popper,[30][31] and Gustav Bergmann[32] espoused metaphysical realism. Hilary Putnam initially espoused metaphysical realism,[33] but he later embraced a form of anti-realism that he termed "internal realism."[34] Conceptualist realism (a view put forward by David Wiggins) is a form of realism, according to which our conceptual framework maps reality.[35]

Speculative realism is a movement in contemporary Continental-inspired philosophy[36] that defines itself loosely in its stance of metaphysical realism against the dominant forms of post-Kantian philosophy.[37]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Craig, Edward (1996). "Realism and antirealism". Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Routledge.
  2. ^ Miller, Alexander (2019). "Realism". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  3. ^ Honderich, Ted (2005). "realism and anti-realism". The Oxford Companion to Philosophy. Oxford University Press.
  4. ^ Elkana, Yehuda (1978). "Two-Tier-Thinking: Philosophical Realism and Historical Relativism". Social Studies of Science. 8 (3): 309–326. ISSN 0306-3127.
  5. ^ Khlentzos, Drew. "Challenges to Metaphysical Realism". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2016 ed.).
  6. ^ Kasavin, Ilya (2015-10-02). "Philosophical Realism: The Challenges for Social Epistemologists". Social Epistemology. 29 (4): 431–444. doi:10.1080/02691728.2014.971913. ISSN 0269-1728.
  7. ^ Conway, Daniel (1999). "Beyond Truth and Appearance: Nietzsche's Emergent Realism". In Babich, Babette E. (ed.). Nietzsche, Epistemology, and Philosophy of Science. Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Vol. 204. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 109–122. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-2428-9_9. ISBN 978-90-481-5234-6.
  8. ^ Petrov, Kristian (2019). "'Strike out, right and left!': a conceptual-historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation". Stud East Eur Thought. 71 (2): 73–97. doi:10.1007/s11212-019-09319-4. S2CID 150893870.
  9. ^ The statement veritas est adaequatio rei et intellectus ("truth is the adequation of thought and thing") was defended by Thomas Aquinas.
  10. ^ Blackburn p. 188
  11. ^ Ronen, Ruth (1995). "Philosophical Realism and Postmodern Antirealism". Style. 29 (2): 184–200. ISSN 0039-4238.
  12. ^ Boyd, Richard. "Realism, approximate truth, and philosophical method". University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy.
  13. ^ Heidemann, D. "Kant and the forms of realism". Synthese (2019).
  14. ^ Laird Addis, Greg Jesson, Erwin Tegtmeier (eds.), Ontology and Analysis: Essays and Recollections about Gustav Bergmann, Walter de Gruyter, 2007, p. 107.
  15. ^ Scientific Realism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
  16. ^ Nick Zangwill, The Metaphysics of Beauty, Cornell University Press, 2001, p. 3.
  17. ^ Gavin McIntosh (2004). "Review: The Metaphysics of Beauty". Mind. 113 (449): 221–226. doi:10.1093/mind/113.449.221. (subscription required)
  18. ^ Realism – philosophy – Britannica.com
  19. ^ John Marenbon, Medieval Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2016, p. 72.
  20. ^ Nominalism, Realism, Conceptualism – Catholic Encyclopedia (1913)
  21. ^ Cuneo and Woudenberg, eds. The Cambridge companion to Thomas Reid (2004) p 85
  22. ^ a b c d Gestalt Theory: Official Journal of the Society for Gestalt Theory and Its Applications (GTA), 22, Steinkopff, 2000, p. 94: "Attention has varied between Continental Phenomenology (late Husserl, Merleau-Ponty) and Austrian Realism (Brentano, Meinong, Benussi, early Husserl)".
  23. ^ Liliana Albertazzi, Dale Jacquette, The School of Alexius Meinong, Routledge, 2017, p. 191.
  24. ^ Mark Textor, The Austrian Contribution to Analytic Philosophy, Routledge, 2006, pp. 170–1:
    "[Husserl argues in the Logical Investigations that the rightness of a judgement or proposition] shows itself in our experience of self-evidence (Evidenz), which term Husserl takes from Brentano, but makes criterial not of truth per se but of our most secure awareness that things are as we take them to be, when the object of judgement, the state of affairs, is given most fully or adequately. ... In his struggle to overcome relativism, especially psychologism, Husserl stressed the objectivity of truth and its independence of the nature of those who judge it ... A proposition is true not because of some fact about a thinker but because of an objectively existing abstract proposition's relation to something that is not a proposition, namely a state of affairs."
  25. ^ Sean Creaven, Marxism and Realism: A Materialistic Application of Realism in the Social Sciences, Routledge, 2012, p. 33.
  26. ^ Michael Resnik, "II. Frege as Idealist and then Realist," Inquiry 22 (1–4):350–357 (1979).
  27. ^ Bertrand Russell, Philosophy of Logical Atomism, Open Court, 1998 [1918].
  28. ^ Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, Routledge 2001 [1921].
  29. ^ Austin, J. L., 1950, "Truth", reprinted in Philosophical Papers, 3rd ed., Oxford: Oxford University Press 1979, 117–33.
  30. ^ Karl Popper, Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth of Scientific Knowledge, 1963.
  31. ^ Thornton, Stephen (2015-01-01). Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Karl Popper (Winter 2015 ed.). ("Popper professes to be anti-conventionalist, and his commitment to the correspondence theory of truth places him firmly within the realist's camp.")
  32. ^ Gustav Bergmann, Logic and Reality, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1964; Gustav Bergmann, Realism: A Critique of Brentano and Meinong, Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1967.
  33. ^ Putnam, H., Realism and Reason. Philosophical Papers, vol. 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.
  34. ^ Putnam, H. Realism with a Human Face. Edited by James Conant. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1990, p. vii.
  35. ^ A. M. Ferner, Organisms and Personal Identity: Individuation and the Work of David Wiggins, Routledge, 2016, p. 28.
  36. ^ Paul John Ennis, Post-continental Voices: Selected Interviews, John Hunt Publishing, 2010, p. 18.
  37. ^ Mackay, Robin (March 2007). "Editorial Introduction". Collapse. 2 (1): 3–13.

References edit

External links edit

  • Miller, Alexander, "Realism", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP)
  • O'Brien, Daniel, "Objects of Perception", The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (IEP)
  • An experimental test of non-local realism. Physics research paper in Nature which gives negative experimental results for certain classes of realism in the sense of physics.

philosophical, realism, usually, treated, position, stance, towards, other, subject, matters, view, that, certain, kind, thing, ranging, widely, from, abstract, objects, like, numbers, moral, statements, physical, world, itself, mind, independent, existence, t. Philosophical realism usually not treated as a position of its own but as a stance towards other subject matters is the view that a certain kind of thing ranging widely from abstract objects like numbers to moral statements to the physical world itself has mind independent existence i e that it exists even in the absence of any mind perceiving it or that its existence is not just a mere appearance in the eye of the beholder 1 2 3 4 This includes a number of positions within epistemology and metaphysics which express that a given thing instead exists independently of knowledge thought or understanding 5 6 This can apply to items such as the physical world the past and future other minds and the self though may also apply less directly to things such as universals mathematical truths moral truths and thought itself However realism may also include various positions which instead reject metaphysical treatments of reality entirely 7 8 Realism can also be a view about the properties of reality in general holding that reality exists independent of the mind as opposed to non realist views like some forms of skepticism and solipsism which question the certainty of anything beyond one s own mind Philosophers who profess realism often claim that truth consists in a correspondence between cognitive representations and reality 9 Realists tend to believe that whatever we believe now is only an approximation of reality but that the accuracy and fullness of understanding can be improved 10 In some contexts realism is contrasted with idealism Today it is more often contrasted with anti realism for example in the philosophy of science 11 12 The oldest use of the term realism appeared in medieval scholastic interpretations and adaptations of ancient Greek philosophy Contents 1 Etymology 2 Varieties 2 1 Metaphysical realism 2 2 Naive or direct realism 2 3 Immanent realism 2 4 Scientific realism 2 4 1 Scientific realism in physics 2 5 Moral realism 2 6 Aesthetic realism 3 History of metaphysical realism 3 1 Ancient Greek philosophy 3 2 Medieval philosophy 3 3 Early modern philosophy 3 4 Late modern philosophy 3 5 Contemporary philosophy 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEtymology editThe term comes from Late Latin realis real and was first used in the abstract metaphysical sense by Immanuel Kant in 1781 CPR A 369 13 Varieties editMetaphysical realism edit See also Metaphysical anti realism and Mathematical Platonism Metaphysical realism maintains that whatever exists does so and has the properties and relations it does independently of deriving its existence or nature from being thought of or experienced 14 In other words an objective reality exists not merely one or more subjective realities Naive or direct realism edit Main article Naive realism See also Indirect realism Naive realism also known as direct realism is a philosophy of mind rooted in a common sense theory of perception that claims that the senses provide us with direct awareness of the external world In contrast some forms of idealism assert that no world exists apart from mind dependent ideas and some forms of skepticism say we cannot trust our senses The naive realist view is that objects have properties such as texture smell taste and colour that are usually perceived absolutely correctly We perceive them as they really are Immanent realism edit Main article Immanent realism Immanent realism is the ontological understanding which holds that universals are immanently real within particulars themselves not in a separate realm and not mere names Most often associated with Aristotle and the Aristotelian tradition Scientific realism edit Main article Scientific realism Scientific realism is at the most general level the view that the world described by science is the real world as it is independent of what we might take it to be Within philosophy of science it is often framed as an answer to the question how is the success of science to be explained The debate over what the success of science involves centers primarily on the status of unobservable entities apparently talked about by scientific theories Generally those who are scientific realists assert that one can make reliable claims about unobservables viz that they have the same ontological status as observables Analytic philosophers generally have a commitment to scientific realism in the sense of regarding the scientific method as a reliable guide to the nature of reality The main alternative to scientific realism is instrumentalism 15 Scientific realism in physics edit Realism in physics especially quantum mechanics is the claim that the world is in some sense mind independent that even if the results of a possible measurement do not pre exist the act of measurement that does not require that they are the creation of the observer contrary to the consciousness causes collapse interpretation of quantum mechanics That interpretation of quantum mechanics on the other hand states that the wave function is already the full description of reality The different possible realities described by the wave function are equally true The observer collapses the wave function into their own reality One s reality can be mind dependent under this interpretation of quantum mechanics Moral realism edit Main article Scientific realism Moral realism is the position that ethical sentences express propositions that refer to objective features of the world Aesthetic realism edit Aesthetic realism not to be confused with Aesthetic Realism the philosophy developed by Eli Siegel or realism in the arts is the view that there are mind independent aesthetic facts 16 17 History of metaphysical realism editSee also History of metaphysical naturalism Ancient Greek philosophy edit Main article Platonic realism nbsp Plato left and Aristotle right a detail of The School of Athens a fresco by Raphael In Plato s metaphysics ever unchanging Forms or Ideas exist apart from particular physical things and are related to them as their prototype or exemplar Aristotle s philosophy of reality also aims at the universal Aristotle finds the universal which he calls essence in the commonalities of particular things In ancient Greek philosophy realist doctrines about universals were proposed by Plato and Aristotle 18 Platonic realism is a radical form of realism regarding the existence of abstract objects including universals which are often translated from Plato s works as Forms Since Plato frames Forms as ideas that are literally real existing even outside of human minds this stance is also called Platonic idealism This should not be confused with idealistic in the ordinary sense of optimistic or with other types of philosophical idealism as presented by philosophers such as George Berkeley As Platonic abstractions are not spatial temporal or subjectively mental they are arguably not compatible with the emphasis of Berkeley s idealism grounded in mental existence Plato s Forms include numbers and geometrical figures making his theory also include mathematical realism they also include the Form of the Good making it additionally include ethical realism In Aristotle s more modest view the existence of universals like blueness is dependent on the particulars that exemplify them like a particular blue bird blue piece of paper blue robe etc and those particulars exist independent of any minds classic metaphysical realism Medieval philosophy edit Medieval realism developed out of debates over the problem of universals 19 Universals are terms or properties that can be applied to many things such as red beauty five or dog Realism also known as exaggerated realism in this context contrasted with conceptualism and nominalism holds that such universals really exist independently and somehow prior to the world Moderate realism holds that they exist but only insofar as they are instantiated in specific things they do not exist separately from the specific thing Conceptualism holds that they exist but only in the mind while nominalism holds that universals do not exist at all but are no more than words flatus vocis that describe specific objects Proponents of moderate realism included Thomas Aquinas Bonaventure and Duns Scotus cf Scotist realism 20 Early modern philosophy edit In early modern philosophy Scottish Common Sense Realism was a school of philosophy that sought to defend naive realism against philosophical paradox and scepticism arguing that matters of common sense are within the reach of common understanding and that common sense beliefs even govern the lives and thoughts of those who hold non commonsensical beliefs It originated in the ideas of the most prominent members of the Scottish School of Common Sense Thomas Reid Adam Ferguson and Dugald Stewart during the 18th century Scottish Enlightenment and flourished in the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Scotland and America The roots of Scottish Common Sense Realism can be found in responses to such philosophers as John Locke George Berkeley and David Hume The approach was a response to the ideal system that began with Descartes concept of the limitations of sense experience and led Locke and Hume to a skepticism that called religion and the evidence of the senses equally into question The common sense realists found skepticism to be absurd and so contrary to common experience that it had to be rejected They taught that ordinary experiences provide intuitively certain assurance of the existence of the self of real objects that could be seen and felt and of certain first principles upon which sound morality and religious beliefs could be established Its basic principle was enunciated by its founder and greatest figure Thomas Reid 21 If there are certain principles as I think there are which the constitution of our nature leads us to believe and which we are under a necessity to take for granted in the common concerns of life without being able to give a reason for them these are what we call the principles of common sense and what is manifestly contrary to them is what we call absurd Late modern philosophy edit See also Objective idealism Transcendental realism Schelling and Transcendental realism Schopenhauer In late modern philosophy a notable school of thought advocating metaphysical realism was Austrian realism Its members included Franz Brentano 22 Alexius Meinong 22 Vittorio Benussi 22 Ernst Mally 23 and early Edmund Husserl 22 These thinkers stressed the objectivity of truth and its independence of the nature of those who judge it 24 See also Graz School Dialectical materialism a philosophy of nature based on the writings of late modern philosophers Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels is interpreted to be a form of ontological realism 25 According to Michael Resnik Gottlob Frege s work after 1891 can be interpreted as a contribution to realism 26 Contemporary philosophy edit See also Structural realism philosophy of science Australian realism Modal realism Critical realism philosophy of the social sciences and New realism philosophy In contemporary analytic philosophy Bertrand Russell 27 Ludwig Wittgenstein 28 J L Austin 29 Karl Popper 30 31 and Gustav Bergmann 32 espoused metaphysical realism Hilary Putnam initially espoused metaphysical realism 33 but he later embraced a form of anti realism that he termed internal realism 34 Conceptualist realism a view put forward by David Wiggins is a form of realism according to which our conceptual framework maps reality 35 Speculative realism is a movement in contemporary Continental inspired philosophy 36 that defines itself loosely in its stance of metaphysical realism against the dominant forms of post Kantian philosophy 37 See also editAnti realism Critical realism Dialectical realism Epistemological realism Extended modal realism Legal realism Modal realism Objectivism Philosophy of social science Principle of bivalence Problem of future contingents Realism disambiguation Truth value link realism Speculative realism Direct and indirect realismNotes edit Craig Edward 1996 Realism and antirealism Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Routledge Miller Alexander 2019 Realism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Retrieved 30 December 2020 Honderich Ted 2005 realism and anti realism The Oxford Companion to Philosophy Oxford University Press Elkana Yehuda 1978 Two Tier Thinking Philosophical Realism and Historical Relativism Social Studies of Science 8 3 309 326 ISSN 0306 3127 Khlentzos Drew Challenges to Metaphysical Realism In Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2016 ed Kasavin Ilya 2015 10 02 Philosophical Realism The Challenges for Social Epistemologists Social Epistemology 29 4 431 444 doi 10 1080 02691728 2014 971913 ISSN 0269 1728 Conway Daniel 1999 Beyond Truth and Appearance Nietzsche s Emergent Realism In Babich Babette E ed Nietzsche Epistemology and Philosophy of Science Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Vol 204 Dordrecht Springer pp 109 122 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 2428 9 9 ISBN 978 90 481 5234 6 Petrov Kristian 2019 Strike out right and left a conceptual historical analysis of 1860s Russian nihilism and its notion of negation Stud East Eur Thought 71 2 73 97 doi 10 1007 s11212 019 09319 4 S2CID 150893870 The statement veritas est adaequatio rei et intellectus truth is the adequation of thought and thing was defended by Thomas Aquinas Blackburn p 188 Ronen Ruth 1995 Philosophical Realism and Postmodern Antirealism Style 29 2 184 200 ISSN 0039 4238 Boyd Richard Realism approximate truth and philosophical method University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy Heidemann D Kant and the forms of realism Synthese 2019 Laird Addis Greg Jesson Erwin Tegtmeier eds Ontology and Analysis Essays and Recollections about Gustav Bergmann Walter de Gruyter 2007 p 107 Scientific Realism Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Nick Zangwill The Metaphysics of Beauty Cornell University Press 2001 p 3 Gavin McIntosh 2004 Review The Metaphysics of Beauty Mind 113 449 221 226 doi 10 1093 mind 113 449 221 subscription required Realism philosophy Britannica com John Marenbon Medieval Philosophy A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press 2016 p 72 Nominalism Realism Conceptualism Catholic Encyclopedia 1913 Cuneo and Woudenberg eds The Cambridge companion to Thomas Reid 2004 p 85 a b c d Gestalt Theory Official Journal of the Society for Gestalt Theory and Its Applications GTA 22 Steinkopff 2000 p 94 Attention has varied between Continental Phenomenology late Husserl Merleau Ponty and Austrian Realism Brentano Meinong Benussi early Husserl Liliana Albertazzi Dale Jacquette The School of Alexius Meinong Routledge 2017 p 191 Mark Textor The Austrian Contribution to Analytic Philosophy Routledge 2006 pp 170 1 Husserl argues in the Logical Investigations that the rightness of a judgement or proposition shows itself in our experience of self evidence Evidenz which term Husserl takes from Brentano but makes criterial not of truth per se but of our most secure awareness that things are as we take them to be when the object of judgement the state of affairs is given most fully or adequately In his struggle to overcome relativism especially psychologism Husserl stressed the objectivity of truth and its independence of the nature of those who judge it A proposition is true not because of some fact about a thinker but because of an objectively existing abstract proposition s relation to something that is not a proposition namely a state of affairs Sean Creaven Marxism and Realism A Materialistic Application of Realism in the Social Sciences Routledge 2012 p 33 Michael Resnik II Frege as Idealist and then Realist Inquiry 22 1 4 350 357 1979 Bertrand Russell Philosophy of Logical Atomism Open Court 1998 1918 Ludwig Wittgenstein Tractatus Logico Philosophicus Routledge 2001 1921 Austin J L 1950 Truth reprinted in Philosophical Papers 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press 1979 117 33 Karl Popper Conjectures and Refutations The Growth of Scientific Knowledge 1963 Thornton Stephen 2015 01 01 Zalta Edward N ed Karl Popper Winter 2015 ed Popper professes to be anti conventionalist and his commitment to the correspondence theory of truth places him firmly within the realist s camp Gustav Bergmann Logic and Reality Madison University of Wisconsin Press 1964 Gustav Bergmann Realism A Critique of Brentano and Meinong Madison University of Wisconsin Press 1967 Putnam H Realism and Reason Philosophical Papers vol 3 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1983 Putnam H Realism with a Human Face Edited by James Conant Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1990 p vii A M Ferner Organisms and Personal Identity Individuation and the Work of David Wiggins Routledge 2016 p 28 Paul John Ennis Post continental Voices Selected Interviews John Hunt Publishing 2010 p 18 Mackay Robin March 2007 Editorial Introduction Collapse 2 1 3 13 References editBlackburn Simon 2005 Truth A Guide Oxford University Press Inc ISBN 978 0 19 516824 2 External links editMiller Alexander Realism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy SEP O Brien Daniel Objects of Perception The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy IEP An experimental test of non local realism Physics research paper in Nature which gives negative experimental results for certain classes of realism in the sense of physics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philosophical realism amp oldid 1193382856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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