Empiricism is when you learn things by using your eyes, ears, and other senses, just like how you learn about ice cream by tasting it.
Imagine you have a box of toys, but you can’t see inside. You might guess what's in there based on what you’ve seen before. But if you open the box and touch or look at the toys, that’s empiricism, learning by experience instead of just guessing.
How It Works
When you try something new, like touching a hot stove, you learn it’s hot because your skin tells you. That's real-life empiricism! You don’t need someone to tell you it’s hot, you feel it for yourself.
If you see a dog and hear it bark, you know it’s a dog because you used both your eyes and ears together. Empiricism is like having a team of helpers, all your senses working together so you can understand the world around you better.
Examples
- Someone believes the sky is blue because they see it every day.
- A person thinks their favorite food tastes good because they eat it often.
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See also
- How Does Timothy Williamson | The Role of Philosophy Work?
- What is epistemological?
- What If Everyone Knew Everything?
- What is understand?
- What is epistemology?