So are thousands of other papers on it. Why should I care about that particular one?
If you have read thousands of other papers on empiricism, then maybe you would have good reason to ignore this one, but I don’t think this is the case.
All the experts, all of history and all the demonstrations prove you wrong.
Well, maybe not all. The one given in the article somehow has no problem.
Here is a nugget from it in favour of empiricism:
‘Contrary to Russell, empiricism construed as an empirical theory is not selfrefuting. The fundamental principle of empiricism is an empirical hypothesis … If we
demand certainty for knowledge, Russell is correct that empiricism “…cannot, if true,
be known to be so,” but knowledge of the fundamental principle of empiricism is not
necessary to avoid self-refutation. All that is required is that the fundamental
principle of empiricism be an empirical hypothesis, and that it is.’
And here is one that counters a rejection of empiricism:
‘To deny the fundamental principle of empiricism the metaphysician must
claim that it is false: he must claim that there are non-empirical sources of knowledge,
but this also is an empirical claim that has been defended on empirical grounds by
anti-empiricists. Kurt Gödel argued that our capacity for mathematics demonstrates
that humans can “perceive” abstract eternal objects as clearly as we perceive physical
objects. More recently Noam Chomsky has argued for a version of Cartesian
rationalism based on innate ideas. His evidence for his theory of innate ideas is
empirical. That humans do not have any sources of non-empirical knowledge is an
empirical hypothesis and the person who would deny it should present evidence as
such against it’
Here is something on rationality:
‘BonJour (1998), who styles himself a moderate rationalist, argues that there
must be a priori knowledge because without it no knowledge beyond what is
immediately observable would be possible. Since there is such knowledge, we must
have a priori knowledge. However, as admitted by BonJour, this only establishes that
we have a priori knowledge of principles of reasoning and inference. As already
conceded, the moderate empiricist can (and probably must) admit that basic logic and
mathematics are a priori. The interesting issue between the rationalist and the
empiricist is whether a priori knowledge extends beyond these formal realms. In
order to establish that we have access to substantive a priori knowledge rationalists
would need to provide answers to three questions: 1. What is the mechanism? 2. Why
is there no wide agreement? 3. What reliable methods of reaching agreement are
available where there is disagreement? Lacking satisfying answers to these three
questions leaves rationalism without any visible means of support.’
If you want to understand these quotes fully you will need to read the context, ie read the very article which contradicts you. Good luck.