Relations (1)

related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

Belief and suspension of judgment are both categorized as doxastic attitudes or stances toward the truth value of a proposition, as established in [1] and [2]. Furthermore, [3] and [4] define suspension of judgment specifically in relation to the absence of belief or disbelief regarding a proposition.

Facts (4)

Sources
Epistemic Justification – Introduction to Philosophy: Epistemology press.rebus.community Todd R. Long · Rebus Community 4 facts
claimIt is justified to suspend judgment on a proposition p when it is justified neither to believe p nor to disbelieve p.
claimTo suspend judgment on a proposition p is to consider p yet neither believe nor disbelieve it, meaning one is undecided on whether p is true or false.
claimDoxastic attitudes, which are stances on the truth value of a proposition, include belief, disbelief, and suspension of judgment.
claimEpistemology recognizes three stances on the truth value of a proposition: belief, disbelief, or suspension of judgment.