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What is Evidentialism

Principles and Clinical Interventions in Social Cognition
A seminal theory of epistemology, which posits that the justification of belief must be based on evidence which supports that belief, beyond verisimilitude.
Published in Chapter:
Cognition: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives on Western Truth and Reality
Catherine Hayes (University of Sunderland, UK)
Copyright: © 2024 |Pages: 17
DOI: 10.4018/979-8-3693-1265-0.ch002
Abstract
This chapter considers the concepts of truth alongside the art of representation and how mental and linguistic representation of knowledge is what encapsulates truth in practice. At the core of the chapter is the notion that all knowledge is ultimately dependent on understanding. Moving through a consideration of how the sciences were impacted upon by a systemic change in European intellectual infrastructure, discussion surrounds how the Renaissance contributed to the prevailing approach to science that actively shaped rationality and still resonates through todays' traditional approaches to empirical ‘knowing'.
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