positivist
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L325748 on Wikidata ↗adjective
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L339401 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
adj
Etymology: Perhaps borrowed from French positiviste. Equivalent to positive + -ist, after positivism.
- Related to positivism, positivistic.
“The positivist tradition contains some rigorous, well-argued and stimulating methodological discussions; such material should be required reading for qualitative researchers wishing to enhance the quality of their practice.”
“Making use of the conceptual vocabulary of science to exclude a possibility that in a present state of knowledge—or a former one—that vocabulary would seem to exclude, has been the mission of positivist thinking since Auguste Comte declared scientific knowledge effectively complete.”
noun
Etymology: Perhaps borrowed from French positiviste. Equivalent to positive + -ist, after positivism.
- A believer in positivism.
“The English mind is prone to positivism and kindred forms of materialistic philosophy, and we must expect the derivative theory to be taken up in that interest. We have no predilection for that school, but the contrary. If we had, we might have looked complacently upon a line of criticism which would indirectly, but effectively, play into the hands of positivists and materialistic atheists generally.”
“By discouraging what they conceive to be the weakness of their master, the English Positivists have broken the strength of their religion. A man who has faith must be prepared not only to be a martyr, but to be a fool.”