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related 0.40 — supporting 4 facts

Knowledge and inference are fundamentally linked as cognitive processes, where knowledge is structured by inference [1], recognized as a primary source of knowledge in philosophical traditions [2], and required for the derivation of knowledge from sensory data [3]. Furthermore, inference is categorized alongside knowledge as a basic source of epistemic justification [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
Epistemology of Testimony | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
quoteJennifer Lackey (2005) states: “non–reductionists maintain that testimony is just as basic a source of justification (knowledge, warrant, entitlement, and so forth) as sense-perception, memory, inference, and the like”.
Epistemology | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimAll knowledge requires reasoning, as data must be analyzed and inferences must be drawn from sensory input.
A Survey of Incorporating Psychological Theories in LLMs - arXiv arxiv.org arXiv 1 fact
referenceSchema Theory holds that humans store knowledge as dynamic, structured representations formed through repeated experience, which guide inference, memory, and learning.
What is the main difference between Rationalism and Empiricism? byjus.com BYJU'S 1 fact
referenceThe ancient Indian philosopher Kanada accepted perception and inference as the two sources of knowledge, as documented in his work, the Vaisesika Sutra.