Empiricism is inherently inductive – it goes from the specific to the general –
this statement is clearly false because…
empiricism is simply an epistemological claim that your senses are the only source of knowledge. one does not practice empiricism, they simply make the claim
ergo, empiricism is not inherently inductive.
you may be conflating it with the scientific method.
so even in “hardcore” cases, where the claim is “all knowledge comes from empirical interaction with the world”, that statement itself is an expression of empiricism at work. It is “practicing what it preaches” by making that general statement about the world based on a pattern of specifics.
since one doesnt practice empiricism, i assume you mean the scientific method again. mooting the point
however, the statement made here would also fail in that verification and falsification schemes all rely on the empirical claim. which is a logical contradiction.
ergo, the statement is based on an already debunked claim. making it false as well
WSP (and others) I suspect just do not understand the inductive nature of the claim “empiricism is the sole source of knowledge”, and suppose it must be either a) deductive, b) certain (which inductive inferences such as this cannot possibly be) or ideally c) both of the above.
i suppoose none of the above, actually. i uderstand that the empirical claim is a bare logical contradiction that no rational person may accept, and still call themselves rational. to accept a logical contradiction, is to admit that you believe in magic.
to demonstrate again.
"when empiricism claims it is the only source of knowledge, i know this claim is self refuting because it is not knowledge one can gain empirically.
the claim itself is non-empirical knowledge.
hellloooooo…huge logical contradiction in your belief system, right here. in great big flashing lights.
do you believe in magic? or can you accept that your cherished belief is false?
The fallacy of the ‘empiricism refutes itself’ then is basically the forcing of a false threshold on its claims a means of justifying itself.
every belief must be subject to logical contradiction, if it isnt, then its
magic
Empiricism is an example of strong self-consistency – when we review the evidence, and look at what performs and stands up to the tests for knowledge, we see striking patterns that align that knowledge with empirical methods; given the specifics we have available, the generalization that proceeds from the data is that empiricism works, and works in a singular fashion as the building blocks of knowledge (reason gets applied and all that, but empirical (name removed by moderator)ut is the driver).
yet again, empricism is a simple claim. no matter how many times you “verify” the empirical claim, a logical contradiction, you are still relying on that contradiction.
circular reasoning
What empiricism does not claim to do, and what it finds wholly INCONSISTENT with its epistemology is to establish some sort of certain positive validation. Empiricism is the rejection of that basis for acceptance.
again, empiricism is an epistemological claim. not the same thing as the scientific method, which is simply a collection of investigatory techniques. which is inductive, and does suffer the problem of induction.
given the evidence, you are definitely conflating the scientific method with empiricism
The terms warpspeedpetey would demand for “justification” for empiricism would necessarily be a repudiation of empiricism!
if a belief isnt open to invalidation by logical contradiction. then it is magical, the laws of logic and reason do not apply, to this magically invulnerable claim.
do you believe in magic? because i dont.