noun
- the theory that all knowledge comes from sensory experience and observation rather than from reasoning or intuition
- the practice of relying on observation and experiment in medicine or science
Usage: philosophy
Usage: medicine; science
Examples
- John Locke was a famous advocate of empiricism in philosophy.
- The scientist’s empiricism led her to test every hypothesis through careful experimentation.
- Medieval medicine gradually gave way to empiricism and evidence-based practice.
- His empiricism made him skeptical of theories that couldn’t be tested.
- The debate between empiricism and rationalism shaped modern philosophy.
- Medical empiricism requires doctors to base treatments on observed results.