Archive of contributed papers in the subject area of Theory of Knowledge from the Proceedings of the 20th World Congress of Philosophy (The Paideia Project).
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117790
Two movements in ancient philosophy, Pyrrhonism, and Academic Skepticism. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Leo Groarke.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117797
Home to "The Undefinable Ribbon Campaign", which explains and accepts the paradox that results from both being solipsist and having one's web site.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117813
Discussion of a formula to calculate conditional probabilities which figures in subjectivist approaches to epistemology; from teh Stanford Encyclopedia by James Joyce.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117818
Epistemological movement based on Bayesian confirmation and decision theory; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by William Talbott.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117811
Survey of naturalistic epistemology which emphasizes importance of natural selection; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by Michael Bradie and William Harms
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117809
Foundationalist Theories of Epistemic Justification
Survey of theories according to which knowledge and justified belief rest ultimately on a foundation of noninferential knowledge or justified belief. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Richard Fumerton.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117805
Qualia are introspectively accessible, phenomenal aspects of our mental lives. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Michael Tye.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117799
A booklet for teaching theory of knowledge. It includes a list of topics in epistemology with an introduction and a reading list for each.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117816
Survey of analyses of the concept of knowledge, including justified true belief and the Gettier problem; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by Matthias Steup.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117810
A collection of epistemology resources, including other directories, online papers, and graduate programs strong in epistemology.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117793
An approach in epistemology that applies the resources of virtue theory to difficulties in the theory of knowledge. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by John Greco.
(Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 117796