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      • In Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, Rand introduces her theory of knowledge by means of its central feature, a new theory of the nature and formation of concepts. Along the way, she provides her fundamental answer to the Kantian turn in epistemology, offering a non-skeptical, non-mystical approach to knowledge.
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  2. The key, Ayn Rand argues, is that man can form and use concepts. In Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, Rand introduces her theory of knowledge by means of its central feature, a new theory of the nature and formation of concepts. Along the way, she provides her fundamental answer to the Kantian turn in epistemology, offering a non ...

  3. Rand answers these questions in Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, a monograph on the Objectivist theory of concepts. Published in 1967, the book presents Rand’s systematic analysis of the nature of concepts and the process by which they are formed by the human mind.

  4. Rand presents her theory of concept formation in Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology (ITOE), published first as a multi-part series in The Objectivist in 1966–67, and then as a monograph in 1967. Properly formed concepts unit-economize by integrating similar existents.

  5. Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology is a book about epistemology by the philosopher Ayn Rand (with an additional article by Leonard Peikoff ). Rand considered it her most important philosophical writing.

  6. Feb 11, 2010 · Ayn Rand defined epistemology as, “a science devoted to the discovery of the proper methods of acquiring and validating knowledge.” She said that “epistemology is the foundation of philosophy”, and that it is with “a new approach to epistemology” that “the rebirth of philosophy” has to begin. In

  7. Ayn Rand created and defined her philosophy, Objectivism, in the pages of her best-selling novels, particularly The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, and in a series of nonfiction books that address a wide range of fundamental issues in philosophy. Born Alisa Rosenbaum in Tsarist St. Petersburg in 1905, Rand witnessed the Russian Revolution as a ...

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