PHI-SEC-201 (Academic Writing & Research Ethics): Unit 4: Methods of Acquiring Knowledge
Semester: III | Credits: 3 | Contact Hours: 45 | Full Marks: 100
Table of Contents
- Dialectical Method
- Empirical-Scientific Method
- Hermeneutical-Interpretative Method
Dialectical Method
The **Dialectical Method** is a form of reasoning that proceeds through dialogue, debate, or the analysis of contradictions to arrive at truth. It involves the systematic comparison of opposing viewpoints or ideas.
- **Socratic Dialectic:** Proceeds via question and answer to expose contradictions and move toward universal definition.
- **Hegelian Dialectic:** Proceeds through a three-stage logical process of **Thesis**, **Antithesis** (opposition), and **Synthesis** (resolution) to reveal the self-unfolding of the Absolute Idea.
- **Marxist Dialectic:** The application of the Hegelian structure to material and historical conditions (Dialectical Materialism), where contradictions in economic structures drive social change.
Core Principle: Knowledge is achieved by resolving contradictions, moving from a partial truth to a more comprehensive truth.
Empirical-Scientific Method
The **Empirical-Scientific Method** is a systematic approach used primarily in the natural and social sciences to acquire knowledge through **observation and experimentation**.
Steps of the Method:
- **Observation:** Identifying a problem or phenomenon.
- **Hypothesis Formulation:** Proposing a testable explanation (a conjecture).
- **Experimentation/Testing:** Designing controlled conditions to test the hypothesis.
- **Data Analysis:** Using quantitative or qualitative tools to evaluate results.
- **Conclusion:** Confirming, rejecting, or revising the hypothesis.
Philosophical Context: This method relies on **Inductive Logic** (Generalizing from specific observations) and is challenged by Hume (problem of induction) and Popper (falsificationism).
Hermeneutical-Interpretative Method
The **Hermeneutical-Interpretative Method** is the theory and practice of **interpretation**, primarily applied to texts (scriptures, philosophical works, legal documents) but also to actions and cultural practices.
- **Hermeneutics:** The philosophical study of understanding itself. It acknowledges that the interpreter's background influences the understanding of the text.
- **The Hermeneutic Circle:** The understanding of a text's parts depends on the understanding of the whole, and the understanding of the whole depends on the understanding of the parts. Interpretation is a cyclical process of refining understanding.
- **Goal:** To grasp the author's intention, the historical context, and the meaning of the text for contemporary life.
Contrast: The Scientific Method seeks **explanation** (causal laws); the Hermeneutical Method seeks **understanding** (meaning and context).
Key Takeaway for Unit 4:
Distinguish the three methods by their primary goal: **Dialectical** seeks truth through contradiction/debate. **Empirical** seeks truth through observation/causality. **Hermeneutical** seeks truth through interpretation/meaning.