Relations (1)
related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts
Perception and intuition are both categorized as reliable cognitive faculties or sources of justification within epistemological frameworks, as evidenced by their inclusion in lists of intellectual virtues [1], [2], [3] and their role as distinct sources of justification compared to testimony [4].
Facts (4)
Sources
Virtue Epistemology, Anyone? - The Philosophers' Magazine - philosophersmag.com 1 fact
claimVirtue reliabilists define intellectual virtues as faculties such as intuition, memory, and perception.
Virtue Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu 1 fact
claimVirtue reliabilists, such as Goldman, Greco, and Sosa, define intellectual virtues as faculties like perception, intuition, and memory, viewing their approach as a descendant of externalist epistemologies like process reliabilism.
Epistemic Justification – Introduction to Philosophy: Epistemology press.rebus.community 1 fact
claimVirtue reliabilism is the view that justified beliefs are produced by reliable cognitive faculties of persons, such as perception, memory, intuition, and introspection.
Social Epistemology – Introduction to Philosophy - Rebus Press press.rebus.community 1 fact
claimNon-reductionism faces a phenomenalistic problem because, unlike other sources of justification such as perception, introspection, memory, or intuition, testimony does not inherently present itself as true.