Epistemology/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Epistemology, or pages that link to Epistemology or to this page or whose text contains "Epistemology".
Parent topics
- Philosophy [r]: The study of the meaning and justification of beliefs about the most general, or universal, aspects of things. [e]
Subtopics
- Accessibilism [r]: The position that whether someone's belief is justified supervenes only on facts to which that person has some sort of access. [e]
- Evidence [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Hadith [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Internalism and externalism [r]: Names of two contrasting theories in several areas of philosophy, Internalism has a variety of different meanings within philosophy, and for each of these meanings there is a corresponding externalist position which is just the denial of the internalist one. [e]
- Knowledge [r]: On one common account by philosophers, justified, true belief; often used in a looser way by everyone else to mean any truth or belief, and also a whole body of truth or a whole system of belief. [e]
- Mentalism [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Philosophical skepticism [r]: Rejection of the possibility of knowledge. [e]
- Rating raw intelligence [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Reliabilism [r]: The theory that a belief is justified, or a true belief is known, if it is the product of a reliable process. [e]
- Reformed epistemology [r]: Philosophical approach which broadly stated is that we have innate, God-given cognitive systems that provide direct, empirical experience which give us beliefs which require no reason. [e]
- Ontology [r]: Please do not use this term in your topic list, because there is no single article for it. Please substitute a more precise term. See Ontology (disambiguation) for a list of available, more precise, topics. Please add a new usage if needed.
- Semantic Web [r]: Tim Berners-Lee's concept of a "web of knowledge", whereby web-based document contents would be annotated and classified so that computers can parse the classifications and provide search results based on the semantic information (what the content means), rather than simply on matching of text strings. [e]