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Burgess, Anthony, --- Burgess, Anthony --- Wilson, John Burgess --- Wilson, John Anthony Burgess --- バージエスアンソニー --- Kell, Joseph --- Criticism and interpretation.
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Burgess, Anthony --- Criticism and interpretation --- -Criticism and interpretation --- -Wilson, John Anthony Burgess --- Wilson, John Burgess --- Burgess, Anthony, --- Wilson, John Burgess, --- Wilson, John Anthony Burgess, --- バージエスアンソニー, --- Kell, Joseph, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Wilson, John Anthony Burgess --- バージエスアンソニー --- Kell, Joseph --- Burgess, Anthony - Criticism and interpretation
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Burgess, Anthony --- Burgess, Anthony, --- Criticism and interpretation --- -Criticism and interpretation --- Criticism and interpretation. --- -Wilson, John Anthony Burgess --- Wilson, John Burgess --- Wilson, John Burgess, --- Wilson, John Anthony Burgess, --- バージエスアンソニー, --- Kell, Joseph, --- Wilson, John Anthony Burgess --- バージエスアンソニー --- Kell, Joseph --- Burgess, Anthony, - 1917-1993 - Criticism and interpretation --- Burgess (anthony), 1917 --- -Burgess, Anthony, - 1917-1993 --- -Burgess (anthony), 1917-
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Chattanooga Railroad Expedition, 1862 --- Wilson, John A. --- United States --- History --- Prisoners and prisons.
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Long description: Subject of this book is an epistemological consideration concerning the nature of knowledge. But other than the most essays on the subject of knowledge, here I am going to deal with a largely overlooked account to try to find an answer to the question of knowledge. This is the mental state account of knowledge. Or to put it into the main question: is knowledge a mental state? Now, the question is: Why is the epistemic thinking of Cook Wilson, Prichard and Austin afflicted with such ignorance in contemporary epistemic discussions? The answer is: an unreflected Platonian heritage during 2000 years of epistemic thinking -- a notion which is similar to a point Hetherington has called ``epistemic absolutism''. So my main conclusion here is: the JTB thesis (knowledge is some aspect of justified true belief) is insufficient in order to give an account of the nature of knowledge. A consequence from this is: all the epistemic theories which are dealing with the JTB thesis are based on deficient assumptions. Hence their results -- notably the well-known externalism/internalism debate - are insufficient, too. So, there is a need for a new theory of knowledge based on the MS thesis.
Knowledge, Theory of. --- Realism. --- Wilson, John Cook, --- Prichard, H. A. --- Austin, J. L.
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