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related 3.17 — strongly supporting 8 facts

Memory and reason are both categorized as fundamental cognitive faculties or sources of justification for knowledge, as evidenced by their consistent grouping in epistemological theories [1], [2], [3], [4], and [5]. Furthermore, both are identified as reliable belief-forming processes within the framework of reliabilism [6], [7], and are contrasted with other influences like emotion or experience in the development of belief and morality [8].

Facts (8)

Sources
Epistemology | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2 facts
claimReliabilism identifies sources of belief formation such as sense experience, reason, testimony, and memory, and emphasizes the cognitive process that leads to a belief's formation.
claimReliabilism, a prominent version of externalism, suggests that the justification of a belief depends on the source of that belief, such as sense experience, reason, testimony, or memory.
Epistemology - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org Wikipedia 2 facts
claimEpistemologists investigate sources of justification, including perception, introspection, memory, reason, and testimony, to discover how knowledge arises.
claimSources of justification are cognitive capacities or methods through which people acquire justification, with commonly discussed sources including perception, introspection, memory, reason, and testimony.
Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Matthias Steup, Ram Neta · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2 facts
claimFor true beliefs to qualify as knowledge, they must originate from sources considered reliable, which include perception, introspection, memory, reason, and testimony.
claimFor a belief to qualify as knowledge, it must originate from sources considered reliable, such as perception, introspection, memory, reason, and testimony, rather than psychological factors like desires, emotional needs, prejudice, or biases.
Virtue Epistemology | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimErnest Sosa identifies reason, perception, introspection, and memory as qualities that satisfy the conditions of an intellectual virtue or faculty.
What is the main difference between Rationalism and Empiricism? byjus.com BYJU'S 1 fact
claimEmpiricists believe that experience and memory develop a person and their morals, and that evidence found by experiment reveals the world's reality rather than reason and logic.