An introduction to the theory of knowledge:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge [u.a.]
Polity
2006
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XII, 212 S. |
ISBN: | 0745633161 9780745633169 074563317x 9780745633176 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a An introduction to the theory of knowledge |c Dan O'Brien |
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adam_text | CONTENTS DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS P.VI PREFACE P.XI PART I
INTRODUCTIONTO KNOWLEDGE 1 THE THEORY OFKNOWLEDGE P.3 2 WHAT IS
KNOWLEDGE? P.10 PARTII SOURCESOFKNOWLEDGE 3 APRIORI KNOWLEDGE P.25 4
PERCEPTION P.36 5 TESTIMONY P.50 PART III JUSTIFICATION 6
FOUNDATIONALISM P.6L 7 COHERENTISM P.77 8 LNTERNALISM AND EXTERNALISM
P.B7 PART IV SCEPTICISM 9 SCEPTICISM P.LOL 10 THE PROBLEM OF 1NDUCTION
P.LL6 11 NATURALIZED EPISTEMOLOGY P.127 PARTV AREAS OF KNOWLEDGE 12
MEMORY P.L41 13 OTHER MINDS P. /52 14 MORAL KNOWLEDGE P./63 15 GOD P.177
GLOSSARY P. /.90 REFERENCES VI.94 INDEX V204 DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS
PREFACE P.XI PART I INTRODUCTION TO KNOWLEDGE I THE THEORY OF KNOWIEDGE
P.3 1 EPISTEMOLOGY P.3 2 THE STRUCTURE OFTHE BOOK PA 2.1 PART I:
INTRODUETION TO KNOWLEDGE PA 2.2 PARTII: SOURCES OFKNOWLEDGE P.5 2.3
PART III: LUSTIFIEATION P.5 2.1 PART N: SEEPTICISM P.7 2.5 PART V:AREAS
OFKNOWLEDGE P.SS 3 FURTHER READING AND STUDY P.SS 2 WHAT IS KNOWLEDGE?
P.LO 1 PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS P.LO 2 THE TRIPARTITE DEFINITION OF
KNOWLEDGE P.LO 3 ARE JUSTIFICATION AND BELIEF NECESSARY FOR KNOWLEDGE?
P.12 4 GETTIER CASES P.13 5 RICHER NOTIONS OF JUSTIFICATION P.14 5.1
INFALLIBILITY P.14 5.2 NO FALSE BEZIEFS P.15 6 KNOWLEDGE AS BASIC P.17 7
FAMILY RESEMBLANCE P.19 QUESTIONS P.20 FURTHER READING P.2L PART 11
SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE 3 APRIORI KNOWLEDGE P.25 1 KNOWLEDGE, REASON AND
EXPERIENCE P.25 2 RATIONALISM AND EMPIRICISM P.26 3 THE SYNTHETIC
APRIORI P.27 4 SELF-EVIDENCE AND CERTAINTY P.29 DETAILED CHAPTER
CONTENTS 5 INNATE KNOWLEDGE P.31 QUESTIONS P.34 FURTHER READING P.34 4
PERCEPTION P.36 1 DIRECT REALISM P.36 2 INDIRECT REALISM P.37 2.1
THEARGUMENTFROM ILLUSION P.38 2.2 DUALISM P.39 3 REJECTING REALISM PAA
3.1 !DEALISM PAA 3.2 PHENOMENALISM PAA 3.3 PROBLEMSFOR PHENOMENALISM PA1
4 THE INTENTIONALIST THEARY OF PERCEPTION PA2 4.1 ADVERBIALISM PA3 4.2
!NTENTIONALISM PA3 4.3 PHENOMENOLOGY PA4 5 SEEING THAT, SEEING AS, AND
RAW SEEING PA6 QUESTIONS PA9 FURTHER READING PA9 5 TESTIMONY P.5A 1 THE
INDIVIDUALISTIC APPROACH TO KNOWLEDGE P.5A 2 TESTIMONY P.5A 3 HUME S
ACCOUNT OFTESTIMONY P.51 3.1 THEPROBLEM OF CIRCULARITY P.52 3.2
THEMARTIAN ARGUMENT P.53 4 REID S ACCOUNT OF TESTIMONY P.55 QUESTIONS
P.58 FURTHER READING P.58 PART III }USTIFICATION 6 FOUNDATIONALISM P.61
1 THE REGRESS ARGUMENT FAR TRADITIONAL FOUNDATIONALISM P.61 2 SELLARS
AND THE MYTH OF THE GIVEN P.62 3 CONCEPTUAL AND NON-CONCEPTUAL CONTENT
P.64 4 WITTGENSTEIN S PRIVATE LANGUAGE ARGUMENT P.65 5 EXPERIENCE AND
THOUGHT P.68 6 MODEST FOUNDATIONALISM P.72 QUESTIONS P.75 FURTHER
READING P. 75 VII VIII DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS 7 COHERENTISM P. 77 1 A
HOLISTIC CONCEPTION OF ]USTIFICATION P.77 2 THE CONCEPT OF COHERENCE
P.78 3 PROBLEMS FOR COHERENTISM P.80 3.1 THE ISOLATION PROBLEM P.80 3.2
ALTERNATIVE COHERENT BELIEFSYSTEMS P.81 4 COHERENCE THEORIES OFTRUTH
P.82 5 A COHERENTISTACCOUNT OFPERCEPTION P.83 6 A THINKER S ACCESS TO
HER OWN BELIEF SYSTEM P.84 QUESTIONS P.85 FURTHER READING P.86 8
INTERNALISM AND EXTERNALISM P.87 1 INTERNALISM P.87 2 EXTERNALISM P.88
2.1 THE BASIC RELIABILIST PICTURE P.88 2.2 CAUSAL ACCOUNTS OFKNOWLEDGE
P.90 2.3 TRACKING ACCOUNTS OF KNOWLEDGE P.90 3 ARGUMENTS FOR EXTERNALISM
P.91 3.1 NON-REFLECTIVE KNOWLEDGE P.91 3.2 AN EPISTEMOLOGICAL EURE-ALL
P.92 4 ARGUMENTS AGAINST EXTERNALISM P.93 4.1 KNOWLEDGE AND RATIONALLYMOTIVATED ACTION P.94 4.2 LUCKY YET RELIABLE BELIEFS P.95 5 TWO KINDS
OFKNOWLEDGE P.95 QUESTIONS P.97 FURTHER READING P.97 PART IV SCEPTICISM
9 SCEPTICISM P.LOL 1 CARTESIAN SCEPTICISM P.LO1 1.1 DREAMSAND THEDEMON
P.101 1.2 DESCARTES GOES TO THE MOVIES P.104 2 ACCEPTING CARTESIAN
SCEPTICISM P.106 2.1 WITHHOLDING BELIEF P.107 2.2 DINNER, BACKGAMMON AND
CONVERSATION P.107 3 CONTEXTUALISM P.108 4 COGNITIVE EXTERNALISM P.LL 0
5 THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL EXTERNALIST RESPONSE TO SCEPTICISM P.113 QUESTIONS
P.114 FURTHER READING P.1L4 DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS 10 THE PROBLEM
OFINDUCTION P.IL6 1 INDUCTIVE INFERENCE P.IL6 2 HUME S INDUCTIVE
SCEPTICISM P.116 3 RESPONSES TO INDUCTIVE SCEPTICISM P.IL8 3.1 POPPERS
DEDUCTIVE CONCEPTION O[ SCIENCE P.118 3.2 PROBABILITY P.120 3.3 THE
RELIABILIST RESPONSE TO THE PROBLEM O[INDUCTION P.120 3.4 THE
COHERENTIST RESPONSE P.121 4 THE NEW RIDDLE OFINDUCTION P.121 5
RESPONSES TO THE NEW RIDDLE OFINDUCTION P.123 5.1 SIMPLICITY P.123 5.2
GRUE IS NOT A COLOUR P.124 QUESTIONS P.125 FURTHER READING P.125 11
NATURALIZED EPISTEMOLOGY P.127 1 QUINE AND EPISTEMOLOGY P.127 1.1
THE[AI/URE O[ TRADITIONAL EPISTEMOLOGY P.127 1.2 QUINE AND SCEPTICISM
P.128 1.3 QUINE AND THE APRIORI P.130 2 THE NORMATIVE NATURE
OFEPISTEMOLOGY P.133 3 LESS RADICAL FORMS OFNATURALISM P.135 QUESTIONS
P.136 FURTHER READING P.136 PART V AREAS OF KNOWLEDGE 12 MEMORY P.14L 1
MEMORY, BELIEFAND KNOWLEDGE P.141 2 MEMORY IMAGES P.143 3 THE CAUSAL
THEORY OF MEMORY P.145 4 SCEPTICISM AND THE REALITY OFTHE PAST P.14 7 5
THE RELATION BETWEEN PERCEPTION, TESTIMONY AND MEMORY P.148 QUESTIONS
P.150 FURTHER READING P.151 13 OTHER MINDS P.152 1 FIRST PERSON
AUTHORITY P.152 2 THE PROBLEM OF OTHER MINDS AND SOLIPSISM P.153 3 THE
ARGUMENT FROM ANALOGY P.154 4 SEEING MINDS P.155 5 THE PRIVATE LANGUAGE
ARGUMENT REVISITED P.157 IX X DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS 6 BEHAVIOURISM
P.157 7 THEORETICAL KNOWLEDGE OFTHE MIND P.159 QUESTIONS P.161 FURTHER
READING P.161 14 MORAL KNOWLEDGE P.163 1 AN EMPIRICALAPPROACH TO
MORALITY P.163 1.1 UTILITARIANISM P.163 1.2 PROBLEMSFOR UTILITARIANISM
P.165 2 AN APRIORI APPROACH TO MORALITY P.166 2.1 KANTAND THECATEGORICAL
IMPERATIVE P.166 2.2 PROBLEMSFOR KANT S MORAL THEORY P.168 3
MORALTESTIMONY P.169 4 MORAL SCEPTICISM P.172 4.1 RELATIVISM P.172 4.2
EMOTIVISM P.174 QUESTIONS P.175 FURTHER READING P.175 15 GOD P.177 1 AN
APRIORI PROOF FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD: THE ONTOLOGICAL ARGUMENT P.177 2
EMPIRICAL JUSTIFICATION FOR RELIGIOUS BELIEF P.179 2.1 THEARGUMENT FROM
DESIGN P.179 2.2 THEARGUMENTFROM MIRACLES P.181 2.3 HUME ON MIRACLES
P.182 3 PERCEIVING GOD P.183 4 PASCAL S WAGER P.185 5 SCEPTICISM,
ATHEISM AND AGNOSTICISM P.186 QUESTIONS P.188 FURTHER READING P.188
GLOSSARY P.190 REFERENCES P.194 INDEX P.205
|
adam_txt |
CONTENTS DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS P.VI PREFACE P.XI PART I
INTRODUCTIONTO KNOWLEDGE 1 THE THEORY OFKNOWLEDGE P.3 2 WHAT IS
KNOWLEDGE? P.10 PARTII SOURCESOFKNOWLEDGE 3 APRIORI KNOWLEDGE P.25 4
PERCEPTION P.36 5 TESTIMONY P.50 PART III JUSTIFICATION 6
FOUNDATIONALISM P.6L 7 COHERENTISM P.77 8 LNTERNALISM AND EXTERNALISM
P.B7 PART IV SCEPTICISM 9 SCEPTICISM P.LOL 10 THE PROBLEM OF 1NDUCTION
P.LL6 11 NATURALIZED EPISTEMOLOGY P.127 PARTV AREAS OF KNOWLEDGE 12
MEMORY P.L41 13 OTHER MINDS P. /52 14 MORAL KNOWLEDGE P./63 15 GOD P.177
GLOSSARY P. /.90 REFERENCES VI.94 INDEX V204 DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS
PREFACE P.XI PART I INTRODUCTION TO KNOWLEDGE I THE THEORY OF KNOWIEDGE
P.3 1 EPISTEMOLOGY P.3 2 THE STRUCTURE OFTHE BOOK PA 2.1 PART I:
INTRODUETION TO KNOWLEDGE PA 2.2 PARTII: SOURCES OFKNOWLEDGE P.5 2.3
PART III: LUSTIFIEATION P.5 2.1 PART N: SEEPTICISM P.7 2.5 PART V:AREAS
OFKNOWLEDGE P.SS 3 FURTHER READING AND STUDY P.SS 2 WHAT IS KNOWLEDGE?
P.LO 1 PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS P.LO 2 THE TRIPARTITE DEFINITION OF
KNOWLEDGE P.LO 3 ARE JUSTIFICATION AND BELIEF NECESSARY FOR KNOWLEDGE?
P.12 4 GETTIER CASES P.13 5 RICHER NOTIONS OF JUSTIFICATION P.14 5.1
INFALLIBILITY P.14 5.2 NO FALSE BEZIEFS P.15 6 KNOWLEDGE AS BASIC P.17 7
FAMILY RESEMBLANCE P.19 QUESTIONS P.20 FURTHER READING P.2L PART 11
SOURCES OF KNOWLEDGE 3 APRIORI KNOWLEDGE P.25 1 KNOWLEDGE, REASON AND
EXPERIENCE P.25 2 RATIONALISM AND EMPIRICISM P.26 3 THE SYNTHETIC
APRIORI P.27 4 SELF-EVIDENCE AND CERTAINTY P.29 DETAILED CHAPTER
CONTENTS 5 INNATE KNOWLEDGE P.31 QUESTIONS P.34 FURTHER READING P.34 4
PERCEPTION P.36 1 DIRECT REALISM P.36 2 INDIRECT REALISM P.37 2.1
THEARGUMENTFROM ILLUSION P.38 2.2 DUALISM P.39 3 REJECTING REALISM PAA
3.1 !DEALISM PAA 3.2 PHENOMENALISM PAA 3.3 PROBLEMSFOR PHENOMENALISM PA1
4 THE INTENTIONALIST THEARY OF PERCEPTION PA2 4.1 ADVERBIALISM PA3 4.2
!NTENTIONALISM PA3 4.3 PHENOMENOLOGY PA4 5 SEEING THAT, SEEING AS, AND
RAW SEEING PA6 QUESTIONS PA9 FURTHER READING PA9 5 TESTIMONY P.5A 1 THE
INDIVIDUALISTIC APPROACH TO KNOWLEDGE P.5A 2 TESTIMONY P.5A 3 HUME'S
ACCOUNT OFTESTIMONY P.51 3.1 THEPROBLEM OF CIRCULARITY P.52 3.2
THEMARTIAN ARGUMENT P.53 4 REID'S ACCOUNT OF TESTIMONY P.55 QUESTIONS
P.58 FURTHER READING P.58 PART III }USTIFICATION 6 FOUNDATIONALISM P.61
1 THE REGRESS ARGUMENT FAR TRADITIONAL FOUNDATIONALISM P.61 2 SELLARS
AND THE MYTH OF THE GIVEN P.62 3 CONCEPTUAL AND NON-CONCEPTUAL CONTENT
P.64 4 WITTGENSTEIN'S PRIVATE LANGUAGE ARGUMENT P.65 5 EXPERIENCE AND
THOUGHT P.68 6 MODEST FOUNDATIONALISM P.72 QUESTIONS P.75 FURTHER
READING P. 75 VII VIII DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS 7 COHERENTISM P. 77 1 A
HOLISTIC CONCEPTION OF ]USTIFICATION P.77 2 THE CONCEPT OF COHERENCE
P.78 3 PROBLEMS FOR COHERENTISM P.80 3.1 THE ISOLATION PROBLEM P.80 3.2
ALTERNATIVE COHERENT BELIEFSYSTEMS P.81 4 COHERENCE THEORIES OFTRUTH
P.82 5 A COHERENTISTACCOUNT OFPERCEPTION P.83 6 A THINKER'S ACCESS TO
HER OWN BELIEF SYSTEM P.84 QUESTIONS P.85 FURTHER READING P.86 8
INTERNALISM AND EXTERNALISM P.87 1 INTERNALISM P.87 2 EXTERNALISM P.88
2.1 THE BASIC RELIABILIST PICTURE P.88 2.2 CAUSAL ACCOUNTS OFKNOWLEDGE
P.90 2.3 TRACKING ACCOUNTS OF KNOWLEDGE P.90 3 ARGUMENTS FOR EXTERNALISM
P.91 3.1 NON-REFLECTIVE KNOWLEDGE P.91 3.2 AN EPISTEMOLOGICAL EURE-ALL
P.92 4 ARGUMENTS AGAINST EXTERNALISM P.93 4.1 KNOWLEDGE AND RATIONALLYMOTIVATED ACTION P.94 4.2 LUCKY YET RELIABLE BELIEFS P.95 5 TWO KINDS
OFKNOWLEDGE P.95 QUESTIONS P.97 FURTHER READING P.97 PART IV SCEPTICISM
9 SCEPTICISM P.LOL 1 CARTESIAN SCEPTICISM P.LO1 1.1 DREAMSAND THEDEMON
P.101 1.2 DESCARTES GOES TO THE MOVIES P.104 2 ACCEPTING CARTESIAN
SCEPTICISM P.106 2.1 WITHHOLDING BELIEF P.107 2.2 DINNER, BACKGAMMON AND
CONVERSATION P.107 3 CONTEXTUALISM P.108 4 COGNITIVE EXTERNALISM P.LL 0
5 THE EPISTEMOLOGICAL EXTERNALIST RESPONSE TO SCEPTICISM P.113 QUESTIONS
P.114 FURTHER READING P.1L4 DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS 10 THE PROBLEM
OFINDUCTION P.IL6 1 INDUCTIVE INFERENCE P.IL6 2 HUME'S INDUCTIVE
SCEPTICISM P.116 3 RESPONSES TO INDUCTIVE SCEPTICISM P.IL8 3.1 POPPERS
DEDUCTIVE CONCEPTION O[ SCIENCE P.118 3.2 PROBABILITY P.120 3.3 THE
RELIABILIST RESPONSE TO THE PROBLEM O[INDUCTION P.120 3.4 THE
COHERENTIST RESPONSE P.121 4 THE NEW RIDDLE OFINDUCTION P.121 5
RESPONSES TO THE NEW RIDDLE OFINDUCTION P.123 5.1 SIMPLICITY P.123 5.2
GRUE IS NOT A COLOUR P.124 QUESTIONS P.125 FURTHER READING P.125 11
NATURALIZED EPISTEMOLOGY P.127 1 QUINE AND EPISTEMOLOGY P.127 1.1
THE[AI/URE O[ TRADITIONAL EPISTEMOLOGY P.127 1.2 QUINE AND SCEPTICISM
P.128 1.3 QUINE AND THE APRIORI P.130 2 THE NORMATIVE NATURE
OFEPISTEMOLOGY P.133 3 LESS RADICAL FORMS OFNATURALISM P.135 QUESTIONS
P.136 FURTHER READING P.136 PART V AREAS OF KNOWLEDGE 12 MEMORY P.14L 1
MEMORY, BELIEFAND KNOWLEDGE P.141 2 MEMORY IMAGES P.143 3 THE CAUSAL
THEORY OF MEMORY P.145 4 SCEPTICISM AND THE REALITY OFTHE PAST P.14 7 5
THE RELATION BETWEEN PERCEPTION, TESTIMONY AND MEMORY P.148 QUESTIONS
P.150 FURTHER READING P.151 13 OTHER MINDS P.152 1 FIRST PERSON
AUTHORITY P.152 2 THE PROBLEM OF OTHER MINDS AND SOLIPSISM P.153 3 THE
ARGUMENT FROM ANALOGY P.154 4 SEEING MINDS P.155 5 THE PRIVATE LANGUAGE
ARGUMENT REVISITED P.157 IX X DETAILED CHAPTER CONTENTS 6 BEHAVIOURISM
P.157 7 THEORETICAL KNOWLEDGE OFTHE MIND P.159 QUESTIONS P.161 FURTHER
READING P.161 14 MORAL KNOWLEDGE P.163 1 AN EMPIRICALAPPROACH TO
MORALITY P.163 1.1 UTILITARIANISM P.163 1.2 PROBLEMSFOR UTILITARIANISM
P.165 2 AN APRIORI APPROACH TO MORALITY P.166 2.1 KANTAND THECATEGORICAL
IMPERATIVE P.166 2.2 PROBLEMSFOR KANT'S MORAL THEORY P.168 3
MORALTESTIMONY P.169 4 MORAL SCEPTICISM P.172 4.1 RELATIVISM P.172 4.2
EMOTIVISM P.174 QUESTIONS P.175 FURTHER READING P.175 15 GOD P.177 1 AN
APRIORI PROOF FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD: THE ONTOLOGICAL ARGUMENT P.177 2
EMPIRICAL JUSTIFICATION FOR RELIGIOUS BELIEF P.179 2.1 THEARGUMENT FROM
DESIGN P.179 2.2 THEARGUMENTFROM MIRACLES P.181 2.3 HUME ON MIRACLES
P.182 3 PERCEIVING GOD P.183 4 PASCAL'S WAGER P.185 5 SCEPTICISM,
ATHEISM AND AGNOSTICISM P.186 QUESTIONS P.188 FURTHER READING P.188
GLOSSARY P.190 REFERENCES P.194 INDEX P.205 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | O'Brien, Dan |
author_facet | O'Brien, Dan |
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author_sort | O'Brien, Dan |
author_variant | d o do |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV021649080 |
callnumber-first | B - Philosophy, Psychology, Religion |
callnumber-label | BD161 |
callnumber-raw | BD161 |
callnumber-search | BD161 |
callnumber-sort | BD 3161 |
callnumber-subject | BD - Speculative Philosophy |
classification_rvk | CC 4200 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)65468438 (DE-599)BVBBV021649080 |
dewey-full | 121 |
dewey-hundreds | 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
dewey-ones | 121 - Epistemology (Theory of knowledge) |
dewey-raw | 121 |
dewey-search | 121 |
dewey-sort | 3121 |
dewey-tens | 120 - Epistemology, causation, humankind |
discipline | Philosophie |
discipline_str_mv | Philosophie |
edition | 1. publ. |
format | Book |
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index_date | 2024-07-02T15:02:25Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:40:46Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0745633161 9780745633169 074563317x 9780745633176 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-014863753 |
oclc_num | 65468438 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-29 |
owner_facet | DE-29 |
physical | XII, 212 S. |
publishDate | 2006 |
publishDateSearch | 2006 |
publishDateSort | 2006 |
publisher | Polity |
record_format | marc |
spelling | O'Brien, Dan Verfasser aut An introduction to the theory of knowledge Dan O'Brien 1. publ. Cambridge [u.a.] Polity 2006 XII, 212 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Knowledge, Theory of Wissen (DE-588)4066559-8 gnd rswk-swf Erkenntnistheorie (DE-588)4070914-0 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Erkenntnistheorie (DE-588)4070914-0 s Wissen (DE-588)4066559-8 s DE-604 V:DE-604 application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014863753&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | O'Brien, Dan An introduction to the theory of knowledge Knowledge, Theory of Wissen (DE-588)4066559-8 gnd Erkenntnistheorie (DE-588)4070914-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4066559-8 (DE-588)4070914-0 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | An introduction to the theory of knowledge |
title_auth | An introduction to the theory of knowledge |
title_exact_search | An introduction to the theory of knowledge |
title_exact_search_txtP | An introduction to the theory of knowledge |
title_full | An introduction to the theory of knowledge Dan O'Brien |
title_fullStr | An introduction to the theory of knowledge Dan O'Brien |
title_full_unstemmed | An introduction to the theory of knowledge Dan O'Brien |
title_short | An introduction to the theory of knowledge |
title_sort | an introduction to the theory of knowledge |
topic | Knowledge, Theory of Wissen (DE-588)4066559-8 gnd Erkenntnistheorie (DE-588)4070914-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Knowledge, Theory of Wissen Erkenntnistheorie Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=014863753&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT obriendan anintroductiontothetheoryofknowledge |