David Botting defends Aristotle as an empiricist against those who see him as a rationalist, focusing on Aristotle's account of how we acquire the first principles of science. The author argues that Aristotle's account is empiricist and that first principles are, perhaps surprisingly, known inferentially and not by intuition.
David Botting defends Aristotle as an empiricist against those who see him as a rationalist, focusing on Aristotle's account of how we acquire the first principles of science. The author argues that Aristotle's account is empiricist and that first principles are, perhaps surprisingly, known inferentially and not by intuition.
Introduction Chapter One: The Ways of Deducing Chapter Two: The Ways of Learning Chapter Three: the Ways of Knowing Chapter Four: The Ways of Science Conclusion References About the Author
Introduction Chapter One: The Ways of Deducing Chapter Two: The Ways of Learning Chapter Three: the Ways of Knowing Chapter Four: The Ways of Science Conclusion References About the Author
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