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The word epistemology, means the study of knowledge, and is derived from episteme.
These interactions also alter the way in which scientific episteme is organized.
Truth for Foucault is also something that shifts through various episteme throughout history.
Foucault's 'episteme' is too narrow and abstract, not social enough.
Foucault argues that these conditions of discourse have changed over time, from one period's episteme to another.
Foucault would come to adapt it in a historical sense through the concept of "episteme".
The modern episteme, the character of which Foucault seeks to uncover.
Lecture 3: Foucault's 'episteme' and the importance of his methods.
This, unlike techne and episteme, is an important virtue, which will require further discussion.
They are boring, she says, because we don't share the author's 18th-century episteme; we have different ways of thinking about knowledge and racial differences.
Socrates also compliments techne only when it was used in the context of episteme.
As an episteme of dislocation, migration is also a critical position of translation.
Episteme as knowledge contrasts doxa, Plato's term for common belief or opinion.
In classical rhetoric, it is contrasted with episteme.
Episteme is a genus of moths of the Noctuidae family.
Epistemic modalities (from the Greek episteme, knowledge), deal with the certainty of sentences.
The constant emphasis on its being the Western episteme suggests immediate problems for any assumption that it constitutes a totality.
Episteme Links: a particularly valuable search engine.
Episteme means knowledge, as in "justified true belief" in the terminology of the philosopher Plato.
Unlike knowledge (episteme), it deals with unarticulated truths.
The episteme is not a general stage of reason, it is a complex relationship of successive displacements.
He's a real composer, for all the tightly reined improvisatory latitude he allows his group, Episteme, which is heard here.
Episteme is distinguished from techne, which is knowledge in an applied way as in a craft.
Linguistically, one might compare it to epistemology, which is derived from the Greek words episteme ("certain knowledge") and logos.
In other words, it is part of the emergence of episteme and philo-sophia, as a love for knowledge that is independent from material benefits.