Foundationalism
From Iron Chariots Wiki
(Difference between revisions)
(recat:Philosophy) |
(stub template reordering) |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| − | |||
{{Philosophy-stub}} | {{Philosophy-stub}} | ||
| + | Classical [[foundationalism]] considers empirical evidence (sensory data) and self-evident [[axiom]]s (math and [[logic]], for example) to be properly basic. Modern foundationalism, denies that sensory data is properly basic, as our senses can be unreliable, and accepts only self-evident axioms and beliefs which are incorrigible (unable to be proven wrong). Reformed epistemology attempts to build a bridge between these [[belief]]s, asserting that sensory data, memory and [[faith]] in [[God]] are properly basic. | ||
| + | |||
[[Category:Philosophy]] | [[Category:Philosophy]] | ||
[[Category:Epistemology]] | [[Category:Epistemology]] | ||
Latest revision as of 18:42, 15 September 2009
Classical foundationalism considers empirical evidence (sensory data) and self-evident axioms (math and logic, for example) to be properly basic. Modern foundationalism, denies that sensory data is properly basic, as our senses can be unreliable, and accepts only self-evident axioms and beliefs which are incorrigible (unable to be proven wrong). Reformed epistemology attempts to build a bridge between these beliefs, asserting that sensory data, memory and faith in God are properly basic.