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(Tıp) empirical
Pertaining to or based on experience
Verifiable by means of scientific experimentation
Depending on the existence of a regularity in the causality and succession of natural events which permits the acquisition of human knowledge from experiments or experience because identical natural or physical conditions and events always produce identical results or consequences The natural sciences are empirical The social or human sciences are not UF 21, 27, 63, et al
relying on medical quackery; "empiric treatment"
Depending upon experience or observation alone, without due regard to science and theory; said especially of medical practice, remedies, etc
or Empirical Testing: Meaning "after the fact" or "experimental," empirical testing involves actual "real-world" experiments to determine the outcome of component changes
relationships that are derived from statistical analysis of experimental data For example, if basal metabolic rate is measured in many animals of differing size and plotted out on a graph, the observed relationship that BMR increases in proportion to some function of animal size is an empirical relationship It describes the link between the data but does not give any indication as to the reasons for it
That which depends on personal experience or scientific and observable experiments
1 "Empirical" is most often used as a modifier of "knowledge" When so used it describes the mode by which that knowledge is obtainable Some authors use the term "empirical" as equivalent to "a posteriori", i e as equivalent to "by experience" In this book, however, I adopt the stricter (narrower) meaning prescribed by Immanuel Kant in which "empirical" means not "by experience" but "only by experience" (see [34], 149-56) When I write that something, P, is knowable empirically, I mean that P cannot be known (by human beings) in any way other than by experience Whatever is humanly knowable, but in a way other than by experience, is knowable a priori (See definitions of "a priori" and "a posteriori" )
Political analysis based on factual and observable data in contrast to thoughts or ideas
Derived from experience or experiment
originating in or based on observation or experience; capabable of being disproved or suppported by observation or experiment
one of Kant's four main perspectives, aiming to establish a kind of knowledge which is both synthetic and a posteriori Most of the knowledge we gain through ordinary experience, or through science, is empirical 'This table is brown' is a typical empirical statement (Cf transcendental)
Refers to observations or experiences; empirical methodologies in communication are based on or are derived from experiences with observable phenomena
From a Greek word meaning "to experiment," it is used by philosophers to mean that which has to do with sense experience
Empirical evidence or study relies on practical experience rather than theories. There is no empirical evidence to support his thesis. + empirically em·piri·cal·ly empirically based research They approached this part of their task empirically. based on scientific testing or practical experience, not on ideas   theoretical, hypothetical hypothetical (empiric (16-21 centuries), from empiricus, from empeiria )
wanting in science and deep insight; as, empiric skill, remedies
Capable of observation, measure, and reproduction (repeatable) at least in principle
Developed from experience or observations without regard to science and theory (4)