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belief

The Provcast
Captioned

Helen Parish

Meet Worcester's Senior Tutor.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Me and My Beliefs: Challenges of Identity and Society

Me and My Beliefs: Challenges of Identity and Society held on 28 November 2017
Religious Epistemology, Contextualism, and Pragmatic Encroachment

What is Justified Group Belief

Jennifer Lackey (Northwestern) gives a talk in the New Insights in Religious Epistemology International Conference, held in Oxford in June 2015.
Religious Epistemology, Contextualism, and Pragmatic Encroachment

Phenomenal Conservatism and Religious Belief

Richard Swinburne, University of Oxford, gives the first talk in the New Insights in Religious Epistemology International Conference, held in Oxford in June 2015.
Religious Epistemology, Contextualism, and Pragmatic Encroachment

Fundamental Disagreements and Defeat

Fourth talk given by Professor John Pittard (Yale Divinity School) at the Defeat and Religious Epistemology for the New Insights and Directions in Religious Epistemology Workshop, Oxford University on 18th March 2014
Religious Epistemology, Contextualism, and Pragmatic Encroachment

(Undercutting) Epistemic Defeat and the 'Conciliatory' Road to Agnosticism

Second talk given by Dr. J. Adam Carter (Edinburgh) at the Defeat and Religious Epistemology from the New Insights and Directions in Religious Epistemology Workshop, Oxford University held on 17th March 2014
Theology Faculty

What Makes a Belief Believable? Graham Ward Inaugural Lecture

Graham Ward is the Regius Professor Divinity, Christ Church, University of Oxford and a Canon of the Cathedral. Here, he gives his inaugural lecture as Regius Professor of Divinity on What makes a belief believable.
General Philosophy

5.4 Scepticism, Externalism and the Ethics of Belief

Part 5.4. Looks at the role the concept of knowledge plays in life, the different levels of knowledge we require in certain contexts and the return of scepticism over knowledge.
General Philosophy

5.3 Gettier and Other Complications

Part 5.3. The difference between internalist and externalist accounts of knowledge; whether we need external factors to justify knowledge or whether internal accounts are sufficient, and the Gettier cases.
General Philosophy

5.2 The Traditional Analysis of Knowledge

Part 5.2. Explores the idea of conscious and unconscious knowledge (should a person know that they know something or does it not matter?) and the theory of justification of propositions and beliefs.

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