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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Nomology

Nomology \No*mol"o*gy\, n. [Gr. no`mos law + -logy.]

  1. The science of law; legislation.

  2. The science of the laws of the mind; rational psychology.
    --Sir W. Hamilton.

Wiktionary
nomology

n. 1 The study of laws 2 The study of general physical and logical laws 3 The science of the laws of the mind; rational psychology.

Wikipedia
Nomology

Nomology, the science of the laws of the mind.

In philosophy, nomology (from the Greek νόμος, law, and λόγος, reason) is concerned with the thinking process of the mind. The name nomology may come from Aristotle (Aristotle, 1995). The ‘-ology’ suffix implies ‘order’, ‘word’ and ‘reason’, and is about being subjectively reasonable or ‘logical’ as in sociology and psychology. The ‘nom-’ part implies ‘rule’ and ‘law’, and is about being objectively lawful or ‘nomical’ as in economics. A nomological approach requires taking account of both subjective and objective aspects in a decision. Nomology provides the framework for building a nomological network of relationships between constructs in decision making.

Nomology has been described as one of two grand divisions of philosophy, the other being metaphysics.

"The Laws by which our faculties are governed, to the end that we may obtain a criterion by which to judge or to explain their procedures and manifestations, we have a science which we may call the Nomology of Mind, - Nomological Psychology”.

Nomology is described as the 'branch of science and philosophy concerned with the laws or principles governing the operation of the mind, especially as defined by custom or culture'.