| Acknowledgments |
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xi | |
| Introduction |
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1 | (1) |
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1 | (11) |
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i Epistemology: What It Is |
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1 | (3) |
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ii The Importance of Words |
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4 | (2) |
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iii Some of the Distinctive Epistemic Claims I Attempt to Establish in This Book |
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6 | (3) |
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iv Brief Synopses of the Chapters in This Book |
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9 | (3) |
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12 | (402) |
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v Insights from Lexical Semantics: Ambiguity and Polysemy |
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12 | (8) |
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vi Insights from Lexical Semantics: Retraction and the Factivity of "Know(s)" |
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20 | (3) |
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vii Insights from Lexical Semantics: Laterality and Metaphoricality |
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23 | (3) |
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viii Insights from Lexical Semantics: Semantic Entailments |
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26 | (3) |
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ix The Lexical Analysis of Words Versus the Functional Analysis of Them |
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29 | (2) |
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31 | (5) |
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xi Xphilosophy and the Threat of Idiolectical Scepticism |
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36 | (9) |
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1 Knowledge Attributions to Minimal Epistemic Agents |
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45 | (38) |
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45 | (6) |
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51 | (6) |
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1.3 Insects and Non-biological Things Know a Lot Too |
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57 | (8) |
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1.4 The Flexibility of Cognition Attributions: Φing that p |
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65 | (2) |
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1.5 Knowledge, Belief, Action, and Consciousness |
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67 | (3) |
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1.6 Knowledge and Belief (and Consciousness Too) |
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70 | (4) |
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74 | (3) |
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1.8 Final Lesson from Knowledge Attributions to Animals: Methods of Knowing aren't Modular |
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77 | (4) |
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1.9 What's Been Done and a Look Ahead |
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81 | (2) |
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2 Knowledge and Knowing that p; "Knowledge" and "Knowing thatp" |
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83 | (14) |
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83 | (2) |
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85 | (8) |
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2.3 "Knowing p" and "Knowing that p" |
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93 | (4) |
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3 The Variability of Know(s)-that Judgments |
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97 | (34) |
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97 | (5) |
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3.2 Some Thought Experiments that Are Problematic for Classic Invariantists |
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102 | (4) |
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3.3 Hawthorne's DSK Principle |
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106 | (3) |
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3.4 Comparing Knowing and Knowledge Attributions Across Contexts |
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109 | (11) |
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3.5 Comparing Knowing and Knowledge Attributions Across Agents |
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120 | (4) |
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3.6 Knowledge Relativism Denied |
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124 | (1) |
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3.7 What Speaker-Hearers Can Reasonably Be Taken to Be Confused About with Respect to their Own Usage |
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125 | (4) |
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3.8 Making Progress? (Where We Are and Where We're Going) |
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129 | (2) |
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131 | (40) |
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4.1 Introduction; Preliminaries About Assertion |
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131 | (5) |
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136 | (6) |
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4.3 Experiencing Asserting, Assertions, and Their Differences |
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142 | (6) |
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4.4 The Assertions of Spokespersons and Moorean Remarks |
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148 | (3) |
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4.5 Assertions: Of Journalists, in Advertisements, by Cartoon Characters and Flakes |
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151 | (5) |
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156 | (4) |
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4.7 Burge's Acceptance Principle |
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160 | (3) |
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4.8 Expectations in Special Cases |
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163 | (6) |
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169 | (2) |
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5 Usage Traps in the Language of Iterated Knowledge Attributions |
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171 | (35) |
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5.1 Introductory Remarks About KK and K-iK and About Metacognition |
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171 | (7) |
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5.2 Exclamation and Redundancy Uses of "Know(s)" |
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178 | (6) |
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5.3 Redundancy Usages for "Aware" and the Puzzling Case of Pain |
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184 | (4) |
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5.4 Iterated Knowledge and an Agent's Command of Her Concepts |
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188 | (7) |
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5.5 Davidson, Dretske, Esken, and Malcolm on Metacognition, Cognition, Belief, and Metabelief |
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195 | (5) |
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5.6 Iterated Knowledge and Belief, and Justification |
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200 | (2) |
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5.7 Level Confusions in Epistemology |
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202 | (2) |
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5.8 Conclusion and Transition to the Next Chapter |
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204 | (2) |
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6 Iterated and Ground-Floor Cognition, KK and K-iK Arguments and Empirical Studies |
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206 | (39) |
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206 | (3) |
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6.2 The Cartesian Perspective: Full Metacognition About the Self |
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209 | (3) |
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6.3 A Very Minimal Ground-Floor Epistemic Agent Who Cognizes and Knows Without Iterated Knowledge or Cognitions |
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212 | (12) |
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6.4 The Non-transparency of Knowing States |
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224 | (3) |
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6.5 Iterated Knowledge About Deduction |
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227 | (8) |
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6.6 Nonhuman-Animal Studies in "Metacognition" |
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235 | (6) |
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6.7 A Possible Case of Nonhuman-Animal Iterated Cognition? |
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241 | (3) |
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244 | (1) |
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7 Inferential Justification |
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245 | (40) |
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245 | (13) |
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7.2 Justification and Truth |
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258 | (3) |
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7.3 Justifications Based on Truth-Preserving Deduction |
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261 | (6) |
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7.4 Infinite Chains of Justifications |
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267 | (17) |
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7.4.1 Infinite Deductive Sequences of Justifications |
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267 | (6) |
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7.4.2 Probabilistic Infinite Sequences of Justifications |
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273 | (4) |
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7.4.3 A Failing Grade for Infinitism, Nevertheless |
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277 | (7) |
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284 | (1) |
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8 Representational Justification and Challenges to "the Given" |
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285 | (35) |
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8.1 Representational Justification Characterized |
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285 | (3) |
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8.2 Representation and Deduction Exhaust Justification |
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288 | (5) |
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8.3 The Given-Dilemma for Nonpropositional Justification |
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293 | (3) |
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8.4 Why Representational Justifications Needn't Be Experiential |
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296 | (5) |
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8.5 There Are Justification Stopping Points |
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301 | (4) |
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8.6 Justificational Stopping Points in Conversation |
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305 | (6) |
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8.7 Metacognitive Motivations for Enriching Justification |
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311 | (7) |
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318 | (2) |
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9 Confidence, Belief, and Knowledge; The Vagueness of "Know(s)" |
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320 | (23) |
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320 | (3) |
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9.2 Piecemeal Knowledge and Piecemeal Iterated Knowledge |
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323 | (4) |
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9.3 Confidence, Knowledge, and Iterated Knowledge |
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327 | (7) |
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9.4 The Invisibility of Epistemic Standards; the Invisibility of the Vagueness of Epistemic Standards |
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334 | (5) |
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339 | (2) |
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341 | (2) |
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10 Usage Challenges to Fallibilism |
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343 | (43) |
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343 | (2) |
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10.2 Preliminaries: Characterizing Fallibilism, Infallibilism, and Parity Reasoning |
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345 | (8) |
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10.3 When Factivity Misleads |
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353 | (4) |
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10.4 The Factivity of "Know(s)" and Kripke's Dogmatism Paradox |
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357 | (5) |
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10.5 The Factivity and Fallibility of "Know(s)"; and Lotteries |
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362 | (7) |
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369 | (4) |
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10.7 Prefaces and Lotteries |
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373 | (3) |
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10.8 Fallibility Implies the Denial of Knowledge Closure |
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376 | (6) |
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10.9 Rational Belief and Concluding Remarks |
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382 | (4) |
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11 The (Complex) Structure of the Meaning of "Know(s)" |
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386 | (28) |
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386 | (1) |
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11.2 Necessary Conditions and Sufficient Conditions for "Know(s)"; the Relation of These Conditions to Criterion Transcendence |
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386 | (5) |
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11.3 Why "Know(s)" Evades a Definition |
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391 | (8) |
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11.4 Conceptually Engineering a Successor Notion to "Know(s)"? |
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399 | (11) |
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11.5 Social-Role Epistemology |
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410 | (4) |
| Conclusion |
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414 | (3) |
| Appendix: The Aesthetics of Hangman Knots |
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417 | (10) |
| Bibliography |
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427 | (18) |
| Index |
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445 | |