Abstract

Science has continually bridged the gaps in knowledge about reality by exerting its prowess in explanation, discovery and invention. Astonished by the successes of science coupled with the demonstrability and (purported) objectivity of scientific knowledge, scholars are lured to nurse the impression that science is the answer to all questions that need to be asked about reality. This has led to an intellectual fanaticism called scientism where science is seen as the only bona fide way of attaining any true knowledge whatsoever. Consequently, other fields of knowledge suffer grievously from being abandoned, belittled or modified to operate using the scientific method of inquiry. Against this backdrop, this paper argues that science is not the only way of knowing reality. Other fields of knowledge and their traditional methods of inquiry are vital in the understanding of reality that abandoning or constructing them in the scientific light is tantamount to having a parochial view of reality. Through its arguments, the research advances pluralistic, inclusive and complementary approaches.Intradisciplinary and/or interdisciplinary implications: This research challenges the claims and influence of scientism, which holds that science has the answer to every question about reality. The paper contends that other epistemological methods of philosophical, religious, mythical and artistic forms are essential epistemological methods. Hence, the research advances a pluralistic and complementary approach in epistemology.

Highlights

  • This research contends with the scientistic claim that science holds the answer to attaining true and indubitable knowledge

  • The study is premised on the consideration that the apparent objectivity and demonstrability of scientific knowledge, coupled with remarkable scientific discoveries and inventions, continue to nurture a fanaticism dubbed scientism which holds that science is the answer to all questions that need to be asked about reality

  • As a branch of philosophy, science was based on speculation and intuition of the essential properties of nature and the natural purposes of things in tandem with Aristotelian physics (O’Hear 1989:12)

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Summary

Introduction

This research contends with the scientistic claim that science holds the answer to attaining true and indubitable knowledge. Astonished by the successes and advances of science coupled with the systematic accuracy and purported objectivity of scientific knowledge, some scholars like Augustus Comte and Richard Dawkins nurse the feeling that science is the answer to all questions that need to be asked about reality (Midgley 2006:13). If any true knowledge is to be attained at all, the scientific method of inquiry is considered the best way of explaining reality meaningfully.

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