A justified belief is

    • [DOCX File]www.pitt.edu

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      justified belief. And that is a perfectly good way of picking out a centrally important cognitive status. Edmund Gettier famously argues that . more. is required for our ordinary conception of knowledge. But his arguments don’t tell against the claim that justified true belief is still an important cognitive status.


    • A Priori Beliefs and Justified Concepts

      So a necessary condition on an a priori justified belief about the world is that it contains justified concepts. 3. Objection: Unjustified Concepts. I offer a counter-example to this necessary condition – an a priori justified belief about the world which contains an unjustified concept.


    • [DOCX File]Welcome to Department of Philosophy | School of Arts and ...

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      We will discuss in detail the leading theories of epistemic justification, including “internalist” theories, which require for justified belief the availability to the believer of reasons or grounds, and “externalist” theories, which take justified belief to be linked closely to the ability to arrive at true beliefs.


    • [DOC File]PHILOSOPHY 6340 – SEMINAR IN EPISTEMOLOGY

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      Part 1: Perceptual Knowledge and Justified Belief - A Brief Overview. 1. Six Main Alternatives (1) Extreme Skepticism. 1. It is not possible to have any justified beliefs about an external world, either a physical, mind-independent, external world or a non-physical, mind-dependent, external world. 2.


    • [DOC File]Lesson Plan - Day 1

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      A belief is . inferentially justified. iff it is justified by other justified beliefs. If a belief B is inferentially justified, then. There is an infinite series of inferentially justified beliefs, each of which justifies the next belief in the series, and one of which justifies B (infinitism)


    • [DOC File]CAN THE MERE PASSAGE OF TIME JUSTIFY A BELIEF

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      Under this theory, memory does not generate new justification for a belief; rather, it merely preserves whatever justification you previously had for it. In contrast, the “foundationalist theory” maintains that an apparent memory can generate justification for a belief.


    • [DOC File]Philosophy 165: Epistemology

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      Justified True Belief (JTB) is sufficient for knowledge. Knowledge can be false. Descartes had a skeptical view of knowledge. Plato was the first to set forth a tripartite analysis of knowledge. One can attain knowledge through intuition and deductive reasoning. Vincenzo Carrano Set 1 Answers.


    • [DOC File]Philosophy 5340 - Epistemology

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      The final belief is true, and justified, and Smith hasn't gotten to it via any false beliefs, since (a), (b), and (c) are all true. (Notice that (a), (b), and (c) merely say that Smith was provided with evidence for certain propositions, and they are all compatible with its being the case that the evidence in question was evidence for some ...


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