Relations (1)

related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

Fallibilism is a specific epistemological view that addresses the nature of knowledge and certainty, as defined in [1] and [2]. Furthermore, it is categorized as an epistemological position alongside others like foundationalism in [3], and is formally documented within the field of epistemology in [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
What Is Epistemology? Pt. 3: The Nature of Justification and Belief philosimplicity.com Philosimplicity 2 facts
claimFallibilism and skepticism in epistemology focus on the certainty of belief.
claimEpistemological positions are not mutually exclusive; for example, an individual can be an externalist regarding knowledge while being an internalist regarding justification, or simultaneously a fallibilist and a foundationalist.
Understanding epistemology and its key approaches in research cefcambodia.com Koemhong Sol, Kimkong Heng · Cambodian Education Forum 1 fact
referenceLeite, A. (2010) discusses fallibilism in the entry 'Epistemology from A to Z' within 'A Companion to Epistemology'.
Epistemology | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimFallibilism is the epistemological view that it is possible to possess knowledge even when a true belief might have turned out to be false.