Relations (1)
related 2.58 — strongly supporting 5 facts
Psychology and biology are interconnected as both contribute to the study of consciousness [1] and are frequently analyzed together through stimulus-response causal sequences [2]. Furthermore, they are linked through their shared role in epistemology {fact:3, fact:4} and the evolutionary psychology perspective that seeks to establish psychology as a branch of biology [3].
Facts (5)
Sources
Naturalized Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu 1 fact
claimThe relevance of empirical work in psychology and biology to epistemology depends on whether epistemology is defined broadly as the study of human knowledge or narrowly as the study of specifically philosophical questions about knowledge.
The Problem of Hard and Easy Problems cambridge.org 1 fact
claimMany phenomena in biology and psychology are studied as stimulus-response causal sequences in laboratory settings, where they are often cut off from the causal structure of the world, rendering them functionally undefined.
Evolutionary psychology - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org 1 fact
perspectiveProponents of evolutionary psychology suggest that the field seeks to integrate psychology into the natural sciences by rooting it in evolutionary theory, thereby understanding psychology as a branch of biology.
(PDF) On the function of consciousness - an adaptationist perspective academia.edu 1 fact
claimConsciousness is considered one of the most significant and challenging topics in cognitive science, with contributions from disciplines including engineering, philosophy, psychology, biology, neurology, quantum physics, linguistics, and anthropology.
[PDF] Naturalized Epistemology - Digital Commons @ Trinity digitalcommons.trinity.edu 1 fact
claimEpistemology collapses without residue into sciences such as biology and psychology.