Relations (1)
related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts
Virtue epistemology is directly concerned with the concept of justification, as it seeks to analyze or define it through the lens of intellectual virtue [1], [2], and [3], specifically characterizing it as the product of a reliable, truth-aimed cognitive system [4].
Facts (4)
Sources
Virtue Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu 1 fact
claimConventional virtue epistemology (VE) utilizes the resources of virtue epistemology to address standard questions in contemporary Anglophone epistemology, such as providing analyses or definitions of knowledge and justification, solving puzzles like the Gettier problem and the lottery problem, constructing counterexamples, and confronting the skeptic.
Epistemic Justification – Introduction to Philosophy: Epistemology press.rebus.community 1 fact
claimVirtue epistemology defines justification as a matter of having one’s beliefs produced by a properly functioning, reliable, truth-aimed cognitive system.
Virtue epistemology - Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy rep.routledge.com 1 fact
claimSome virtue epistemology theories propose that traditional concepts of justification or knowledge can be analyzed in terms of intellectual virtue, while others argue that traditional concepts are defective or uninteresting and should be replaced by the notion of intellectual virtue.
Virtue epistemology - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org 1 fact
claimVirtue epistemology attempts to solve problems in modern epistemology, such as justification and reliabilism, by focusing on the knower as an agent, similar to how virtue ethics focuses on moral agents.