The proposition, ‘I only believe in what can be observed empirically, or what can be inferred from what is empirically observed,’ cannot itself be derived from empirical observation!
Greg L. Bahnsen

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The proposition, ‘I only believe in what can be observed empirically, or what can be inferred from what is empirically observed,’ cannot itself be derived from empirical observation!
Greg L. Bahnsen
Plato (ca. 428 - 348 B.C.) and his student Aristotle (384 - 322 B.C.) have influenced modern thinking in psychology greatly (and other fields). Plato was a rationalist, and believed that knowledge gets acquired through thinking and logical analysis. Aristotle was an empiricist, and believed that knowledge gets acquired through empirical evidence (experience and observation). Both these approaches are used to some extent together in the psychology discipline. Rationalism is important for theory development and empiricism for the empirical evidence. References: Image: ilimvemedeniyet.com Philosophy: Cognitive Psychology, Sternberg (2012)