Philosophical Conceptions
(a science that attempts to discover the fundamental principles of the sciences, the arts, and the world that the sciences and arts influence)
						positivism					
					
						The restriction of philosophical inquiry to problems open to scientific methods.					
									
						pragmatism					
					
						The doctrine that truth is the practical efficacy of an idea.					
									
						prolegomena					
					
						Introductory studies.					
									
						realism					
					
						1. In epistemology, the doctrine that the external world exists independently of perception, and substantially as perceived by humans.
2. In logic, the doctrine that universal ideas have objective realities corresponding to them.
									2. In logic, the doctrine that universal ideas have objective realities corresponding to them.
						scholasticism					
					
						The philosophy of the medieval theologians; in general, the separation of speculation from observation and practice.					
									
						sociology					
					
						The study of social institutions and processes.					
									
						subjective					
					
						As existing in thought; in Spinoza, as the object of thought.					
									
						substance					
					
						In Spinoza, the basic and eternal reality, the structure and law of the world.					
									
						teleology					
					
						The theory or study of development as caused by the purposes which things serve.					
									
						theist					
					
						A believer in a personal God.					
									
						transcendental					
					
						Beyond the realm and reach of the senses.					
									
						tropism					
					
						An invariable response.					
									
						utilitarianism					
					
						The doctrine that all actions are to be judged in terms of their utility in promoting the greatest happiness for the greatest number of people.					
									
						vitalism					
					
						The doctrine that life is the basic realty, of which everything else is a form or manifestation.					
									
						voluntarism					
					
						The doctrine that will is the basic factor, both in the universe and in human conduct.					
									
		