Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 April 2022
Feyerabend's “Classical Empiricism” (1970) draws on a 17th century Jesuit argument against Protestant fundamentalism. The argument is very general, and applies to any simple foundationalist epistemology. Feyerabend uses it against Classical Empiricism—roughly, the view that what is to be believed is exactly what experience establishes, and no more—which he identifies as among other things Newton's “dogmatic ideology.”
The author wishes to thank Elisabeth Lloyd, Philip Kitcher, and Alvin Plantinga for helpful discussions.