concept

deliberation

Facts (10)

Sources
Social Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Feb 26, 2001 2 facts
claimIris Marion Young (2000) and Elizabeth Anderson (2010) defend the epistemic potential of deliberation to illuminate social problems, despite acknowledging the pitfalls of deliberation under conditions of oppression.
claimPhilip Kitcher (2011) explores the challenge of balancing reliance on experts with the democratic commitment to deliberation and equality.
Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu William Seager, Sean Allen-Hermanson · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy May 23, 2001 1 fact
perspectiveThe indeterminacy observed in modern physics appears to be a form of pure randomness that is distinct from the concepts of deliberation, decision, and indecision.
Analysing the behavioural, psychological, and demographic ... - OUCI ouci.dntb.gov.ua Parul Kumar, Md Aminul Islam, Rekha Pillai, Taimur Sharif · Elsevier BV 1 fact
referenceHochman authored the paper 'Fairness requires deliberation: the primacy of economic over social considerations,' published in Frontiers in Psychology, issue 6, page 747.
Attention and consciousness - SelfAwarePatterns selfawarepatterns.com SelfAwarePatterns Jun 12, 2022 1 fact
claimThe phrase 'selection for action' in cognitive science encompasses both physical action and deliberation, which is defined as planning for action.
Social Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Aug 28, 2019 1 fact
claimWray (2014) defends deliberation as a crucial component in the production of group consensus.
Virtue Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Jul 9, 1999 1 fact
claimAlternative virtue epistemology (VE) focuses on topics such as deliberation, inquiry, understanding, wisdom, profiles of individual virtues and vices, relations among distinct virtues and vices, and the social, ethical, and political dimensions of cognition involved in misinformation, disinformation, and propaganda, while shunning definitions and ignoring the radical skeptic.
Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2015 Edition) plato.stanford.edu William Seager, Sean Allen-Hermanson · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy May 23, 2001 1 fact
perspectiveThe indeterminacy observed in modern physics is often criticized as being a form of pure randomness that is remote from the concepts of deliberation, decision, and indecision.
Patterns in the Transition From Founder-Leadership to Community ... arxiv.org arXiv Feb 5, 2026 1 fact
referenceThe paper 'Deliberation and Resolution on Wikipedia: A Case Study of Requests for Comments' published in Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction examines the process of deliberation and resolution on Wikipedia.
Self-Consciousness - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Jul 13, 2017 1 fact
quoteChristine Korsgaard writes: "When you deliberate it is as if there were something over and above all your desires, something which is you, and which chooses which desire to act upon."