Psychology, asked by dvs181202, 10 months ago

relationship of psychology with philosophy medicine and computer science

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Answered by missNAV143957
0

Answer:

plz Mrk as brainliest Science differs from philosophy in that it consists not only of reflection, thinking, but also makes use of empirical methods in order to discover new facts. We cannot acquire new knowledge about reality only by thinking; in order to do that we have to explore reality empirically. Hence we cannot acquire new knowledge by philosophical reflection. This, however, does not mean that philosophical reflection is useless. We all have a pre-scientific knowledge, as a result of our practice as living human beings, continually interacting with the enviroment from birth. All scientific research starts from this pre-scientific knowledge. Much of our prescientific knowledge is implicit, tacit; we are not immediately able to give an account of it. This is true, for example, of our knowledge of language

Answered by rithvik301
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Science differs from philosophy in that it consists not only of reflection, thinking, but also makes use of empirical methods in order to discover new facts. We cannot acquire new knowledge about reality only by thinking; in order to do that we have to explore reality empirically. Hence we cannot acquire new knowledge by philosophical reflection. This, however, does not mean that philosophical reflection is useless. We all have a pre-scientific knowledge, as a result of our practice as living human beings, continually interacting with the enviroment from birth. All scientific research starts from this pre-scientific knowledge. Much of our prescientific knowledge is implicit, tacit; we are not immediately able to give an account of it. This is true, for example, of our knowledge of language

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