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  2. Determinism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determinism

    Determinism should not be confused with the self-determination of human actions by reasons, motives, and desires. Determinism is about interactions which affect cognitive processes in people's lives. [4] It is about the cause and the result of what people have done. Cause and result are always bound together in cognitive processes.

  3. Reductionism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reductionism

    Ontological reductionism: a belief that the whole of reality consists of a minimal number of parts. Methodological reductionism: the scientific attempt to provide an explanation in terms of ever-smaller entities. Theory reductionism: the suggestion that a newer theory does not replace or absorb an older one, but reduces it to more basic terms ...

  4. Psychological determinism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychological_determinism

    Orectic psychological determinism is the view that we always act upon our greatest drive. This is often called psychological hedonism, and if the drive is specified for self-interest, psychological egoism. Rational psychological determinism claims that we always act according to our "strongest" or "best" reason.

  5. Antireductionism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antireductionism

    The opposite of reductionism is holism, a word coined by Jan Smuts in Holism and Evolution, that understanding a system can be done only as a whole.One form of antireductionism (epistemological) holds that we simply are not capable of understanding systems at the level of their most basic constituents, and so the program of reductionism must fail.

  6. Deterministic system (philosophy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deterministic_system...

    A deterministic system is a conceptual model of the philosophical doctrine of determinism applied to a system for understanding everything that has and will occur in the system, based on the physical outcomes of causality. In a deterministic system, every action, or cause, produces a reaction, or effect, and every reaction, in turn, becomes the ...

  7. Causal closure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causal_closure

    It attempts to reduce all teleological final (and formal) causes to efficient causes. Goetz and Taliaferro urge that this challenge is unjustified, partly because it would imply that the real cause of arguing for the physical causal closure is neurobiological activity in the brain, not (as we know it is) the purpose-based attempt to understand ...

  8. Philosophy of psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_psychology

    Related to the philosophy of psychology are philosophical and epistemological inquiries about clinical psychiatry and psychopathology. Philosophy of psychiatry is mainly concerned with the role of values in psychiatry: derived from philosophical value theory and phenomenology , values-based practice is aimed at improving and humanizing clinical ...

  9. Determinism (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determinism_(disambiguation)

    Determinism is the philosophical position that events are entirely determined by pre-existing causes. Determinism has many meanings in different fields: Philosophy