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Anti-psychologism : ウィキペディア英語版 | Anti-psychologism In logic, anti-psychologism is a theory about the nature of logical truth, that it does not depend upon the contents of human ideas but exists independent of human ideas. The term was coined by Gottlob Frege (the most famous anti-psychologist of logic), and has been the centre of an important debate in early phenomenology and analytical philosophy, closely related to the internalism and externalism debate in logic and epistemology. The rival thesis, psychologism, is not widely held amongst logicians, but it does have some high-profile defenders, for example Dov Gabbay. Edmund Husserl was an important proponent of anti-psychologism, and this trait passed on to other phenomenologists, such as Martin Heidegger, whose doctoral thesis was meant to be a refutation of psychologism. They shared the argument that, because the proposition "no-p is a not-p" is not logically equivalent to "It is thought that 'no-p is a not-p'", psychologism does not logically stand. Psychologism was criticized in logic also by Charles Sanders Peirce〔Peirce attacked the idea, held by some logicians at that time, that rationality rests on a feeling of logicality, rather than on fact. See the first of Peirce's 1903 Lowell Institute Lectures "What Makes a Reasoning Sound?", ''Essential Peirce'' v. 2, pp. 242-257. See also the portion of Peirce's 1902 ''Minute Logic'' published in ''Collected Papers'' v. 2 (1931), paragraphs 18–19 and 39–43. Peirce held that mathematical and philosophical logics precede psychology as a special science and that they do not depend on it for principles.〕 whose fields included logic, philosophy, and experimental psychology,〔Peirce (sometimes with Joseph Jastrow) investigated the probability judgments of experimental subjects, pioneering decision analysis. He and Jastrow wrote "On Small Differences in Sensation", ''Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences'' (1885), 3, 73-83, presented 17 October 1884, reprinted in Collected Papers v. 7, paragraphs 21–35. ''Classics in the History of Psychology''. (Eprint ).〕 and generally in philosophy by Maurice Merleau-Ponty who held the chairs of philosophy and child psychology〔Reynolds, Jack (as last updated 2005), "Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908–1961)", ''Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy''. (Eprint ).〕 at Sorbonne in France. ==Notes== 〔
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