Results 201 to 210 of about 6,700 (225)
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The Epistemic Trust Assessment—An experimental measure of epistemic trust.
Psychoanalytic Psychology, 2022Paul Schröder-Pfeifer +5 more
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Southwest Philosophy Review
There is an enigma that plagues the modern world. On the one hand, access to information is more abundant than ever. On the other, knowledge seems all the more difficult to come by. The world is divided on numerous fact-based questions regarding nutrition, exercise, public policy impact, sickness prevention, mental wellness, and more. What accounts for
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There is an enigma that plagues the modern world. On the one hand, access to information is more abundant than ever. On the other, knowledge seems all the more difficult to come by. The world is divided on numerous fact-based questions regarding nutrition, exercise, public policy impact, sickness prevention, mental wellness, and more. What accounts for
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Divine Presence and Epistemic Trust
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2012The experience of divine presence is compelling. Yet it immediately confronts the Epistemology of Doubt that has dominated modern philosophy since Descartes. Among its many limitations, this tradition is ill-equipped to understand divine self-presentation. But an alternative tradition can be conceived. Drawing on Thomas Reid and G. E. Moore, as well as
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Trust is an indispensable aspect of our social lives. To lead a normal life, we must rely on others for various forms of cooperation, including education, business, sports, scientific research, cultural communication, and more. As a significant theme, trust has garnered widespread attention across different disciplines.
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Social Epistemology, 2015
This paper offers an analysis of the nature of epistemic trust (ET). With increased philosophical attention to social epistemology in general and testimony in particular, the role for an epistemic or intellectual version of trust has loomed large in recent debates.
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This paper offers an analysis of the nature of epistemic trust (ET). With increased philosophical attention to social epistemology in general and testimony in particular, the role for an epistemic or intellectual version of trust has loomed large in recent debates.
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Trust and Epistemic Cooperation
Croatian journal of philosophy, 2001In this paper, I defend a certain moderate version of Humean evidentialism against a Redian non- evidentialist's position. My proposal of cooperative viewpoint of trust is based on the following theses: (i) epistemic cooperation is a necessary condition for us to attain knowledge, (ii) any form of cooperative activity is based on the dependence ...
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Intellectual humility and epistemic trust
2020Epistemic trust helps secure knowledge, and so does intellectual humility. They do so independently; but they can also support each other, and this chapter discusses how. Epistemic trust, at least the form discussed here, is trust in oneself or another person for knowledge. It involves a norm-governed relationship with positive affective and volitional
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Trust, Epistemic Normativity, and Rationality
2014A virtue-based trust model involves a more dynamic conception of trust that is not reducible to the subjective probability, estimation, or belief that a network entity will behave or act as expected. A species of virtue epistemology called virtue perspectivism provides a theoretical anchor for a general theory of rationality that allows us to interpret
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Reconciling Epistemic Trust and Responsibility
2019Both trust and epistemic responsibility are crucial to securing knowledge and other epistemic goods, yet there seems to be a tension between them. On the one hand, epistemic responsibility presumably involves attending to one’s evidence; on the other, trust seems to involve going beyond evidence. Grasswick’s chapter aims to show how epistemic trust can
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