This book addresses the argument in the history of the philosophy
of science between the positivists and the anti-positivists. The
author starts from a point of firm conviction that all science and
philosophy must start with the given... But that the range of the
given is not definite. He begins with an examination of science
from the outside and then the inside, explaining his position on
metaphysics and attempts to formulate the character of operational
acts before a general theory of symbolism is explored. The last
five chapters constitute a treatise to show that the development
from one stage of symbolismto the next is inevitable, consequently
that explanatory science represents the culmination of knowledge.
General
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