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- the state of showing no real interest or effort: After a sudden burst of activity, the team lapsed back into indolence. The people feel trapped between the indolence and apathy of the authorities and fear of the criminals.
dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/indolence
An Introduction to the Philosophy of Psychology Psychology aims to give us a scientific account of how the mind works. But what does it mean to have a science of the mental, and what sort of picture of the mind emerges from our best psychological theories? This book addresses these philosophical puzzles in a way that is accessible to readers ...
Apr 19, 2018 · n. the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature, origin, and limitations of knowledge. It is also concerned with the justification of truth claims. Mainly owing to the work of René Descartes, epistemology has been the dominant question in philosophy since the 17th century (see Cartesianism; Cartesian self; modernism).
the state of showing no real interest or effort: After a sudden burst of activity, the team lapsed back into indolence. The people feel trapped between the indolence and apathy of the authorities and fear of the criminals. See. indolent.
Bermúdez defines the philosophy of psychology as “the systematic study of the interplay between philosophical concerns in the study of cognition.” Current investigations in psychology emphasize this subject matter using empirical, experimental, and/or statistical basis.
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Nov 7, 2005 · Concepts are the building blocks of thoughts. Consequently, they are crucial to such psychological processes as categorization, inference, memory, learning, and decision-making. This much is relatively uncontroversial.
Jun 18, 2004 · Associationist psychology, whether pursued by Locke or later in the eighteenth century by David Hume (1739) or in the nineteenth by James Mill (1829), aimed to discover the principles by which conscious thoughts or ideas interacted or affected each other.
Mar 21, 2007 · ‘Psychologism’ entered the English language as a translation of the German word ‘ Psychologismus ’, a term coined by the Hegelian Johann Eduard Erdmann in 1870 to critically characterize the philosophical position of Eduard Beneke (Erdmann 1870).