By the phenomenalistic line of thinking, to have a visual experience of a real physical thing is to have an experience of a certain kind of group of experiences. |
Historically, it may be plausible that the notorious perplexities of the traditional problem of how mind relates to body motivated both the phenomenalistic positivists as well as the behaviourists and physicalists. |
Is the application of phenomenalistic psychology or the application of teleological voluntarism in question? |
That the Kohlbergian model is anti-relativistic yet phenomenalistic may seem paradoxical, yet we need to bear in mind that these positions refer to two distinct processes. |
Mathematics would, then, be the phenomenalistic science of the form and order of the world. |
And yet it would be misleading to place the totality of phenomenalistic sciences as a subdivision under the teleological sciences. |