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'We are workers who are adding to the growth of objective knowledge as masons work on a cathedral.' - Karl Popper, Objective Knowledge
The extent and scope of human knowledge is arguably one of humankind's greatest achievements. Since Descartes, however, the theory of human knowledge has been mainly what philosophers call subjectivist: even scientific knowledge was regarded as a special kind of human belief, but human nonetheless. In Objective Knowledge, which contains some of his most important writings on epistemology, Karl Popper breaks decisively and controversially with this view of human knowledge.
A realist and a fallibilist, he argues that human knowledge, stated in human language, is no longer part of ourselves but open to objective criticism. Above all, Popper argues that human knowledge grows through a process of conjecture, testing and criticism. Such objective knowledge has significance also for us as individuals, as critical interaction with problem-situation and the constant process of trial and error playing a role in all walks of life, from philosophy and science to music and art.
A brilliant exposition of Popper's theory of knowledge, this Routledge Classics edition includes a new Introduction by Jeremy Shearmur, which provides some helpful context to Objective Knowledge and Popper's philosophy in general.
Contents
Introduction to the Routledge Classics Edition Jeremy Shearmur Dedication Preface Acknowledgements 1. Conjectural Knowledge: My Solution of the Problem of Induction 2. Two Faces of Common Sense: An argument for Commonsense Realism and Against the Commonsense Theory of Realism 3. Epistemology Without a Knowing Subject 4. On the Theory of the Objective Mind 5. The Aim of Science 6. Of Clouds and Clocks 7. Evolution and the Tree of Knowledge 8. A Realist View of Logic, Physics and History 9. Philosophical Comments on Tarski's Theory of Truth Addendum: A Note on Tarski's Definition of Truth Appendix 1. The Blanket and the Searchlight: Two Theories of Knowledge Appendix 2: Supplementary Remarks. Index