When is true belief knowledge?
A woman glances at a broken clock and comes to believe it is a quarter past seven. Yet, despite the broken clock, it really does happen to be a quarter past seven. Her belief is true, but it isn't knowledge. This is a classic illustration of a central problem in epistemology: determining what k...
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Formato: | Libro |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Princeton :
Princeton University Press
cop. 2012
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Colección: | Princeton monographs in philosophy
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Materias: | |
Ver en Universidad de Navarra: | https://unika.unav.edu/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma991003164069708016&context=L&vid=34UNAV_INST:VU1&search_scope=34UNAV_TODO&tab=34UNAV_TODO&lang=es |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- An observation
- Post-gettier accounts of knowledge
- Knowledge stories
- Intuitions about knowledge
- Important truths
- Maximally accurate and comprehensive beliefs
- The beetle in the box
- Knowledge blocks
- The theory of knowledge and theory of justified belief
- The value of true belief
- The value of knowledge
- The lottery and preface
- Reverse lottery stories
- Lucky knowledge
- Closure and skepticism
- Disjunctions
- Fixedness and knowledge
- Instability and knowledge
- Misleading defeaters
- Believing that I don't know
- Introspective knowledge
- Perceptual knowledge
- A priori knowledge
- Collective knowledge
- A look back
- Epistemology within a general theory of rationality
- The core concepts of epistemology.