Defination of " Epistemology"
Defination of " Epistemology"
Defination of " Epistemology"
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Nature of knowledge
Epistemology is the study of the nature and scope
of knowledge and justified belief (Walumbwa et al, 2009).
It analyzes the nature of knowledge and how it relates
to similar notions such as truth, belief and justification
(Brown et al, 2005, piccolo et al, 2010).
Epistemology
Belief Truth
Knowledge is
the awareness and understanding of
particular aspects of reality. It is the
clear, lucid information gained through the
process of reason applied to reality.
The traditional approach is that
knowledge requires three necessary and
sufficient conditions, so that knowledge
can then be defined as "justified true
belief“:
JUSTIFICATION
Edmund Gettier called this traditional
theory of knowledge into question by
claiming that there are certain
circumstances in which one does not
have knowledge, even when all of
the above conditions are
met (his Gettier-cases)
NATURE OF JUSTIFICATION
EXTERNALISM AND INTERNALISM
Memory allows us to know something that we
knew in the past, even, perhaps, if we no longer
remember the original justification.
Positivism
“only scientific knowledge is the true knowledge
of the world perceived through senses (the
observable phenomenon)” (Auguste ,1842).
Example: The body temperature.
Antipositivism
“knowledge cannot be studied with the scientific
method of investigation applied to the natural
world”.
Example:
The color green sleeps angrily.
Post Positivism
“All observation is imperfect and has
error and that all theory is revisable”.
(Hacking, 1983)
Example:
Every one is inherently biased by their
cultural experiences, and world views.
Each construct of our view is based on
our perception of the world.
Realism
“Is the view that the object exists in reality
independently of our conceptual scheme”.
(Black Burn,
2005)
Anti Realism
“Truth of a statement rests on its correspondence
to an external, independent reality”.
(Baron and Engle,
2010).
Example:
Types of Realism
Indirect Realism/critical Realism
Is the view that the world we see in
conscious experience is not the real world
itself, but merely a miniature virtual-reality.
We only see images not things directly
(John Locke, 1700).
Example:
When you watch international cricket match
on television for a sponsor in a prominent
position it’s a illusion. It is in fact painted on
Types of Realism(Cont)
Direct Realism/New Realism
“when one is conscious of an object, it is an
error to say that there are two distinct facts:
knowledge of the object in a mind, and an
extra-mental object in itself” (Holt et al ,
1912).
What you see is what you get.
What we experience through our sense
portrays the world accurately.
Conventionalist Epistemology
Example:
We get knowledge from other sources such as parents,
teachers, and friends.
Feminist Epistemology
Concerned with the way in which
gender influences our concept of
knowledge and "practices of
inquiry and justification".
(Anderson, 2004)
Feminist Epistemology
Standpoint Theory.
Is a theory that feminist social science should be
practiced from the standpoint of women or particular
groups of women. (Hill
Collins, 2009)
Feminist Postmodernism
Moving beyond the liberal feminism and fundamental
feminism. (Garratta,
1995)
Feminist Empiricism
Feminist theories objectively proven through
evidence.
Epistemic injustice
“When someone is wronged in their capacity
as a knower” (Miranda Fricker, 2009).
Types of Epistemic Injustice
Testimonial injustice
Consists in prejudices that cause one to "give
a reduced level of trustworthiness to a
speaker's word.
Example
Woman who due to her gender is not believed in a business
meeting.
Types of Epistemic
injustice
Hermeneutical injustice
When the speakers do not have proper
resources to make a claim. (Miranda
Fricker, 2009).
Example
When the language of sexual harassment
is not available those who experience it
lacked the resources to make a claim.
Virtue Epistemology
“Focus on the argument that
belief is an ethical process thus
subject to the intellectual virtue
or one's own life and personal
experiences”.
(Jay Wood, 1998)
Types of Virtue Epistemology
Virtue Responsibilism
conceive of intellectual virtues
as good intellectual character
traits, traits like attentiveness,
fair-mindedness, open-
mindedness, and courage
(Sosa, 1980)
Types of Virtue Epistemology
Virtue Reliabilism
Conceive of intellectual virtues as
stable and reliable cognitive
abilities or powers and cite vision,
self-examination, and memory.
(Sosa, 2009).
Moral Epistemology
Moral epistemology is the study of moral
knowledge and related phenomena.
(Aaron Zimmerman, 2010).
Moral facts and moral values such as
beliefs, feelings and attitudes are objective
and independent of our perception. (Brink,
1989 and Railton, 1986)
Example:
“Lying for personal gain is wrong.”
Religious Epistemology
An approach to epistemological questions from
a religious perspective.
Evidentialism
Reformed Epistemology
Religious Pluralism
Evidentialism
Belief in God is rational if only it is
based on reasons which provide
adequate evident to support it.
Basic belief is belief if
Evident to the sense (e-g There is tree
outside my window).
Self evident (e-g 1+2=3)
About one’s immediate experience(e-g
I am feeling pain).
Reformed Epistemology
It is possible for a religious belief to
be entirely rational or justified even
if there is no evidence supporting
these beliefs.
Perceptual belief (I see a tree).
Memory belief (I had a breakfast
this morning).
Belief about other person (that
person is in pain).
Religious Pluralism