facets: Pragmatism

stanford plato

Pragmatism is a philosophical tradition that – very broadly – understands knowing the world as inseparable from agency within it. This general idea has attracted a remarkably rich and at times contrary range of interpretations, including: that all philosophical concepts should be tested via scientific experimentation, that a claim is true if and only if it is useful (relatedly: if a philosophical theory does not contribute directly to social progress then it is not worth much), that experience consists in transacting with rather than representing nature, that articulate language rests on a deep bed of shared human practices that can never be fully ‘made explicit’.

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agency

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epistemologies Knowing as agency ontologies truth as that which is useful ecologies scientific testability transactional, representational, relational uses practice language that articulate language rests on a deep bed of shared human practices that can never be fully ‘made explicit’

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