School of Thought
A School of Thought is a knowledge pattern for some academic discipline.
- AKA: Intellectual Tradition.
- Example(s):
- a School of Economic Thought.
- a School of Psychological Thought.
- a School of Statistical Thought, e.g. Bayesians vs. Frequenstists.
- a School of Legal Thought, such as Legal Positivism.
- See: Knowledge Community, Academic Discipline.
References
2021
- (Wikipedia, 2021) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/school_of_thought Retrieved:2021-3-4.
- A school of thought, or intellectual tradition, is the perspective of a group of people who share common characteristics of opinion or outlook of a philosophy, discipline, belief, social movement, economics, cultural movement, or art movement.
Schools are often characterized by their currency, and thus classified into "new" and "old" schools. There is a convention, in political and philosophical fields of thought, to have "modern" and "classical" schools of thought. An example is the modern and classical liberals. This dichotomy is often a component of paradigm shift. However, it is rarely the case that there are only two schools in any given field.
Schools are often named after their founders such as the “Rinzai school” of Zen, named after Linji Yixuan; and the Asharite school of early Muslim philosophy, named after Abu l'Hasan al-Ashari. They are often also named after their places of origin, such as the Ionian school of philosophy, which originated in Ionia; the Chicago school of architecture, which originated in Chicago, Illinois; the Prague school of linguistics, named after a linguistic circle founded in Prague; and the Tartu–Moscow Semiotic School, whose representatives lived in Tartu and Moscow.
- A school of thought, or intellectual tradition, is the perspective of a group of people who share common characteristics of opinion or outlook of a philosophy, discipline, belief, social movement, economics, cultural movement, or art movement.