Disambiguation evidence for chapter "Knowledge, Error, and Probable Opinion" via surface form

""Knowledge, Error, and Probable Opinion""


As subject (42)

Triples where this entity appears as subject under the label ""Knowledge, Error, and Probable Opinion"".

Predicate Object
aimsTo analyze the possibility of error in human cognition
aimsTo clarify what can be known with certainty
aimsTo distinguish knowledge from probable opinion
author Bertrand Russell
concerns conditions under which beliefs count as knowledge
concerns epistemic limits of human cognition
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
discusses criteria for knowledge
discusses degrees of belief
discusses distinction between knowledge and opinion
discusses epistemic justification
discusses fallibility of human beliefs
discusses probable knowledge
discusses relation between truth and belief
discusses role of evidence in belief
discusses skepticism about certainty
genre epistemology
genre philosophy
hasAuthorRole Bertrand Russell as epistemologist
hasForm prose exposition
hasInfluenceOn introductory epistemology education
includedIn early 20th-century epistemology canon
instanceOf book chapter
instanceOf philosophical text
isChapterOf a work first published in 1912
language English
mainTopic certainty and uncertainty
mainTopic justification of belief
mainTopic limits of human knowledge
mainTopic nature of knowledge
mainTopic possibility of error in belief
mainTopic probability in epistemology
mainTopic probable opinion
partOf The Problems of Philosophy
surface form: "The Problems of Philosophy"
philosophicalDiscipline theory of knowledge
philosophicalPositionDiscussed fallibilism
philosophicalPositionDiscussed probabilism in belief
relatedWork The Problems of Philosophy
surface form: "The Problems of Philosophy"
targetAudience general educated readers
targetAudience students of philosophy
workIn analytic philosophy tradition
workType non-fiction