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from ¸üÀ¸Ï«Æ¯¾Ê¿·Ãå¾ðÊó
(2025-9-3 14:00)
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Coherentist Theories of Epistemic Justification
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2025-9-3 12:56)
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[Revised entry by Erik Olsson on September 2, 2025.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
An epistemically justified belief, characterized as neutrally as is feasible, is a belief that properly held, given the believer's perspective, for the sake of believing the truth. According to a coherence theory of epistemic justification, also known as coherentism, a belief is epistemically justified by cohering with other beliefs. The nature of the coherence has been variously explained, as is discussed below. This coherentism is distinct from a coherence theory of truth, that is, a theory saying that a...
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from ¸üÀ¸Ï«Æ¯¾Ê¿·Ãå¾ðÊó
(2025-9-3 12:00)
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Neuroethics
from Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
(2025-9-3 11:41)
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[Revised entry by Adina Roskies on September 2, 2025.
Changes to: Main text, Bibliography]
Neuroethics is an interdisciplinary field focusing on ethical issues raised by our increased and constantly improving understanding of the brain and our ability to monitor and influence it. 1. The rise and scope of neuroethics...
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(2025-9-3 10:48)
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from ¸üÀ¸Ï«Æ¯¾Ê¿·Ãå¾ðÊó
(2025-9-3 0:00)
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Â裳²ó°åÎÅ»ö¸ÎÄ´ººÀ©ÅÙÅù¤Î°åÎŰÂÁ´¤Ë·¸¤ë¸¡Æ¤²ñ»ñÎÁ
from ¸üÀ¸Ï«Æ¯¾Ê¿·Ãå¾ðÊó
(2025-9-2 23:00)
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(2025-9-2 19:12)
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