Find over 25,000 psychological definitions


rationalism

n.

1. any philosophical position holding that (a) it is possible to obtain knowledge of reality by reason alone, unsupported by experience, and (b) all human knowledge can be brought into a single deductive system. This confidence in reason is central to classical Greek philosophy, notably in its mistrust of sensory experience as a source of truth and the preeminent role it gives to reason in epistemology. However, the term rationalist is chiefly applied to thinkers in the Continental philosophical tradition initiated by René Descartes, most notably Baruch Spinoza and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Rationalism is usually contrasted with empiricism, which holds that knowledge comes from or must be validated by sensory experience. Psychoanalytical approaches, humanistic psychology, and some strains of cognitive theory are heavily influenced by rationalism.

2. in religion, a perspective that rejects the possibility or the viability of divine revelation as a source of knowledge.

3. in general, any position that relies on reason and evidence rather than on faith, intuition, custom, prejudice, or other sources of conviction. —rationalist adj., n.

Browse dictionary by letter

a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

Psychology term of the day

May 8th 2024

mental chemistry

mental chemistry

a concept proposed by John Stuart Mill as an alternative to the mental mechanics described by his father, James Mill. The concept is modeled on a common phenomenon in physical chemistry, in which two chemical substances combine to form a compound with properties not present in either of the components. Similarly, Mill held that compound ideas were not merely combinations of simpler ideas but that they possessed other qualities not present in any of the constituent ideas. Thus, such an idea could be an essentially new one. See associationism; association of ideas.