S
steph_86
Guest
I would like to know what the traditional understanding of epistemology within Catholic philosophy. According, to the rationalists, reason is the ultimate source of knowledge. Plato, for example, used to think that, the human being is born with ideas that are innate to him and that - like Socrates - the purpose of education was to bring those ideas out.
For the empiricists, all knowledge comes from experience and it is not possible for reason to be the final authority on reality. Reality, for many empiricists, however, was seen with skepticism and many were those - like David Hume - who doubted that we could apprehend reality in itself.
I, for myself, struggle with the notion of innate ideas. Is this true? Is this part of Catholic philosophy and theology? Also, I tend to think that all knowledge starts with the senses and that even mathematical truths would not exist if we did not have sense experience. Am I wrong?
For the empiricists, all knowledge comes from experience and it is not possible for reason to be the final authority on reality. Reality, for many empiricists, however, was seen with skepticism and many were those - like David Hume - who doubted that we could apprehend reality in itself.
I, for myself, struggle with the notion of innate ideas. Is this true? Is this part of Catholic philosophy and theology? Also, I tend to think that all knowledge starts with the senses and that even mathematical truths would not exist if we did not have sense experience. Am I wrong?