... account of knowledge. Within the discipline
of philosophy, epistemology is the study of the nature of knowledge and justification: in
particular, the study of (a) the defining components, (b) the ... illustrates the hopes of the modal logicians who developed
epistemic logic with Fitch's proof for unknowables and the surprise-test paradox. He
considers th...
...
that the value of the created universe increases in proportion to the variety of kinds of
beings God creates. For the purpose of the created world is to reflect the infinite goodness
of God. ... independent of who they are and the kind of lives they
lead. To base his love on who they are and the kind of lives they lead would be to take
those persons and the...
... understood in terms of the
theory of defeasibility rather than the theory of sources or of positive grounds.
The importance of incoherence as a defeater of justification, then, is not a good ... rational from
the point of view of theoretical reason, as well as a twofold requirement: of an adequate
proportion of rational cognitions and of the absence of cert...
... in the US,
as part of an attempt to find a more positive official term than
handicapped (the official term in the US) or disabled (the
preferred term in the UK during the eighties). Another ... published by the Oxford University Press. It follows in the
tradition of the Supplement to the Oxford English Dictionary in attempting
to record the history of some rec...