credit
Facts (6)
Sources
Virtue Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Jul 9, 1999 3 facts
claimJohn Greco (2007) argues that Morris deserves credit for learning the truth because credit for cooperative success can accrue to multiple individuals, provided their efforts and abilities are appropriately involved in the success.
claimTo earn credit for a true belief, an individual's reliable cognitive faculties must be the most salient part of the explanation for why they believe the truth.
claimWayne Riggs distinguishes between two senses of credit: praiseworthiness and attributability, arguing that knowledge requires that a true belief be attributable to an agent, but not that the agent be praiseworthy for it.
Business ecosystems as a way to activate lock-in in business models link.springer.com Mar 28, 2025 1 fact
referenceSchumpeter published the book 'The theory of economics development: An inquiry into profits, capital, credit, interest, and the business cycle' via Harvard University Press in 1934.
Social Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Feb 26, 2001 1 fact
claimCredit in science influences selective processes, including who remains in a discipline, whose ideas become influential, and whose students secure employment.
Virtue Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Jul 9, 1999 1 fact
referenceJennifer Lackey argued that individuals do not deserve credit for everything they know in a 2007 article.