physicalism
[ fiz-i-kuh-liz-uh m ]
/ ˈfɪz ɪ kəˌlɪz əm /
noun
a doctrine associated with logical positivism and holding that every meaningful statement, other than the necessary statements of logic and mathematics, must refer directly or indirectly to observable properties of spatiotemporal things or events.
Origin of physicalism
OTHER WORDS FROM physicalism
phys·i·cal·ist, noun, adjectiveWords nearby physicalism
British Dictionary definitions for physicalism
physicalism
/ (ˈfɪzɪkəˌlɪzəm) /
noun
philosophy
the doctrine that all phenomena can be described in terms of space and time and that all meaningful statements are either analytic, as in logic and mathematics, or can be reduced to empirically verifiable assertions
See also logical positivism, identity theory