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词汇 epistemic
释义

Definition of epistemic in English:

epistemic

adjective ˌɛpɪˈstiːmɪkˌɛpɪˈstɛmɪkˌepəˈstēmik
  • Relating to knowledge or to the degree of its validation.

    认识的,知识的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This allows them to accord individuals a degree of epistemic privilege with respect to their own inner goings-on.
    • Indeed, many such philosophers are not concerned with the analysis of any ordinary concept of knowledge or of epistemic justification.
    • Nanda locates a number of sources of epistemic charity or nihilism.
    • We alone can be wracked with doubt, and we alone have been provoked by that epistemic itch to seek a remedy: better truth-seeking methods.
    • This is because it remains possible that evaluative epistemic facts supervene on naturalistic ones.
    • Now, S was not taking an ontological stance, it seems, but rather an epistemic one.
    • There is a further reason why Russell's epistemic approach is unacceptable.
    • In these contexts, my beliefs fail to meet the epistemic standard and therefore fail to count as knowledge.
    • On one kind of interpretation, Descartes relaxes his epistemic standards in the Sixth Meditation.
    • However, my self-interest is tempered by a sense of epistemic value, namely the value of evidence-based public policy.
    • Skeptics note that in the epistemic context it is inappropriate to grant anyone knowledge.
    • We can create metaphysical arguments as to their truth or falsity either way, but in everyday epistemic terms cannot help but believe them.
    • They are both sources of value in themselves, and sometimes constitute epistemic avenues to value.
    • But such seems to be our epistemic predicament where space is concerned.
    • Some Pascalians propose combining pragmatic and epistemic factors in a two-stage process.
    • Again, the goal is metaphysical austerity and faithfulness to our epistemic position.
    • It is perfectly possible to accept moral relativism while rejecting epistemic relativism - relativism about truth.
    • This attitude would seem to lead to a kind of epistemic paralysis.
    • For example, Ernest Sosa has argued that justified belief is belief that is grounded in epistemic virtue.
    • Let us begin with the first type of thrust, i.e., attempts to debunk the epistemic authority of science.

Derivatives

  • epistemically

  • adverb
    • In this regard, Augustine's illuminationism is a worthy contender among more familiar attempts to make intellectual cognition epistemically secure and reliable.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Descartes does not conceive the ontological argument on the model of an Euclidean or axiomatic proof, in which theorems are derived from epistemically prior axioms and definitions.
      • Only with such a goal in the background does the two-step process of employing historical materialism to establish an epistemically and normatively independent stance make sense.
      • It may be suggested, then, that those philosophers who accord ontological primacy to event causation are tempted to do so by the fact that events seem to be, in general, more epistemically accessible than substances are.
      • An interesting task for social epistemology is to identify the types of collaboration that would be optimal in terms of some epistemically relevant measure.

Origin

1920s: from Greek epistēmē 'knowledge' (see epistemology) + -ic.

Rhymes

anaemic (US anemic), systemic

Definition of epistemic in US English:

epistemic

adjectiveˌepəˈstēmik
  • Relating to knowledge or to the degree of its validation.

    认识的,知识的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • This allows them to accord individuals a degree of epistemic privilege with respect to their own inner goings-on.
    • There is a further reason why Russell's epistemic approach is unacceptable.
    • Some Pascalians propose combining pragmatic and epistemic factors in a two-stage process.
    • But such seems to be our epistemic predicament where space is concerned.
    • This attitude would seem to lead to a kind of epistemic paralysis.
    • Let us begin with the first type of thrust, i.e., attempts to debunk the epistemic authority of science.
    • It is perfectly possible to accept moral relativism while rejecting epistemic relativism - relativism about truth.
    • On one kind of interpretation, Descartes relaxes his epistemic standards in the Sixth Meditation.
    • Skeptics note that in the epistemic context it is inappropriate to grant anyone knowledge.
    • We alone can be wracked with doubt, and we alone have been provoked by that epistemic itch to seek a remedy: better truth-seeking methods.
    • However, my self-interest is tempered by a sense of epistemic value, namely the value of evidence-based public policy.
    • They are both sources of value in themselves, and sometimes constitute epistemic avenues to value.
    • This is because it remains possible that evaluative epistemic facts supervene on naturalistic ones.
    • Again, the goal is metaphysical austerity and faithfulness to our epistemic position.
    • For example, Ernest Sosa has argued that justified belief is belief that is grounded in epistemic virtue.
    • We can create metaphysical arguments as to their truth or falsity either way, but in everyday epistemic terms cannot help but believe them.
    • Now, S was not taking an ontological stance, it seems, but rather an epistemic one.
    • Nanda locates a number of sources of epistemic charity or nihilism.
    • In these contexts, my beliefs fail to meet the epistemic standard and therefore fail to count as knowledge.
    • Indeed, many such philosophers are not concerned with the analysis of any ordinary concept of knowledge or of epistemic justification.

Origin

1920s: from Greek epistēmē ‘knowledge’ (see epistemology) + -ic.

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