Phenomenalism - a philosophical view that direct systems are only available to sensory and emotional senses (called phenomena), and there is no possibility of direct knowledge of beings "in themselves." This view remains in opposition to essence. The concept of phenomenalism was introduced into the modern European philosophy of George Berkeley and David Hume as a result of the final consequences of the concept of British empiricists. The concept of phenomenal development was greatly developed by Immanuel Kant, who sought to overcome some of his paradoxes through the concept of practical mind. The modern development of phenomenalism is, on the one hand, neo-Romanticism, and on the other, phenomenology. Bibliography

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