a. Derived from, or pertaining to, experience. Coleridge. [ 1913 Webster ]
It is called empirical or experiential . . . because it is given to us by experience or observation, and not obtained as the result of inference or reasoning. Sir. W. Hamilton.
-- Ex*pe`ri*en"tial*ly, adv. Dr. H. More. [1913 Webster]
n. (Philos.) The doctrine that experience, either that of ourselves or of others, is the test or criterion of general knowledge; -- opposed to intuitionalism. [ 1913 Webster ]
Experientialism is in short, a philosophical or logical theory, not a psychological one. G. C. Robertson. [ 1913 Webster ]
(adj) derived from experience or the experience of existence; - Benjamin Farrington; - John Dewey, Syn.existential, Example: the rich experiential content of the teachings of the older philosophers; formal logicians are not concerned with existential matters
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