"Positivism materialism and empiricism" Essays and Research Papers

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    Individual Positivism

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    Positivism emerged towards the end of the nineteenth century‚ and sought to oppose traditional‚ Classical ways of criminological thinking. The theory tended to look at crime scientifically‚ in order to produce facts based around the key causes of crime and so‚ they could attempt to truly understand what kind of people offend and for what reasons. Offenders and offending behaviour had been understood before as voluntary concepts‚ where people had free will and the choice to commit crime (or not to)

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    Materialism

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    Materialism in the Modern World How much do you value your possessions? Do you value your belongings more than you value your friends‚ family‚ love or yourself? The truth is that obsession with possessions has become a way of life in today’s society. Materialism‚ the theory or doctrine that physical well-being and worldly possessions constitute the greatest good and highest value in life. This means that people now look to worldly possessions for happiness. These possessions are then used to

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    Empiricism in Geography

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    For the purpose of this essay I will critically discuss aspects of empiricism and the empirical method and their use in geography. I will discuss these aspects with close reference to a recommended reading for our course by Ward et al (2007). Empiricism is a philosophical idea that experience‚ which is based on observation and experimentation‚ is the only source of knowledge. Empiricism believes that the mind is a blank canvas and all knowledge arrives in the mind through the portals that are the

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    Materialism

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    Materialism can refer to either the simple concern with the material world‚ as opposed to the intellectual or spiritual concepts‚ or to the theory that physical matter is all that there is. This theory is way more complex than a simple focus on material possessions. It shows that everything that is in the universe is made of matter‚ without any spiritual or intellectual existence. Materialism can also refer to a doctrine that material success and progress are the highest values in your life. This

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    The basic definition of empiricism is that the philosophy that all knowledge originates in sensory experience. The definition of Rationalism is the epistemological theory that reason is either the sole or primary source of knowledge; in practice‚ most rationalists maintain merely that at least some truths are not known solely on the basis of sensory experience. Plato which suggested within the "Cave Theory" which showed a group of Prisoners is placed so they can see‚ on the wall of the cave‚ only

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    Empiricism and Behaviorism

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    the turn of the twentieth century‚ the field of Psychology found itself in a war between two contending theoretical perspectives: Gestalt psychology versus Behaviorism. With its roots within the United States‚ behaviorists in America were developing a theory that believed psychology should not be concerned with the mind or with human consciousness. Instead‚ behavior and the actions of humans would be the foremost concern of psychologists. Across the Atlantic‚ Gestalt psychology emerged by placing

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    Critically discuss the concepts of empiricism and empirical methods and their use in geography. Empiricism is a philosophical doctrine that our knowledge only comes from experiences. It can be described as a central role of observation. Empiricism was eventually somewhat replaced around the 1970’s by Positivism‚ Humanism‚ Marxist‚ Feminism and Post-Colonialism. However it still plays an important role today’s society‚ for example in the cataloguing of species. There is about 1.7 million species

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    Strengths of Empiricism

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    Empiricism is the claim that sense experience is the sole source of our knowledge about the world. (Lawhead‚ 55) According to Empiricists‚ such as John Locke‚ all knowledge comes from direct sense experience. Locke’s concept of knowledge comes from his belief that the mind is a “blank slate or tabula rosa” at birth‚ and our experiences are written upon the slate. Therefore‚ there are no innate experiences. The three strengths of empiricism that will be explained in this paper are: it proves a theory

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    This essay shall begin by defining what positivism is‚ and how it could be used to approach the study of poverty and what problems there might be with this quantitative method. It will then move on to discuss phenomenology‚ a qualitative method‚ to come to a conclusion on which method (if any) is more useful than the other. The basic philosophy of positivism is that our social world is similar to the natural world in that both are governed by particular ‘laws’; for example‚ just as ‘cause and effect’

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    Critically discuss the concepts of empiricism and empirical methods and their use in geography. Your assignment should highlight the differences between the two‚ as informed by lecture material and reading. You must support your argument by referring to the assigned readings available on Blackboard and a minimum of TWO additional readings from academic sources. An academic style of writing is expected‚ including a complete list of references. “Let us suppose the mind to be‚ as we say

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