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Epistemology

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Epistemology

Table of contents[edit | edit source]

Introduction - What is epistemology?

Section 1: The Analysis of Knowledge[edit | edit source]

  1. What is analysis?
  2. Justified true belief
  3. Gettier cases
  4. Adding an extra condition
  5. Reliabilism
  6. Virtue reliabilism
  7. Virtue responsibilism
  8. Maybe knowledge can't be analysed

Section 1: References and further reading

Section 2: The Sources of Knowledge[edit | edit source]

  1. Rationalism vs Empiricism
  2. Perception
  3. Intuition and deduction
  4. Innatism
  5. Memory and introspection
  6. Testimony
  7. Science

Section 2: References and further reading

Section 3: The Problem of Scepticism[edit | edit source]

  1. Agrippa's trilemma
  2. Foundationalism
  3. Coherentism
  4. Other responses (infinitism, positism, foundherentism)
  5. Radical scepticism (sceptical scenarios and the closure principle)
  6. Contextualism
  7. Here is one hand, and here is another
  8. Even if I'm being deceived I know I'm right (veridicalism)
  9. Pragmatism

Section 4: Living in a World of Knowledge[edit | edit source]

  1. The epistemology of disagreement
  2. Epistemic responsibility
  3. Epistemic injustice
  4. Feminist epistemology
  5. Epistemology of the internet