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The Analysis of Knowledge<br/>What Is Knowledge?<br/>Analysis,<br/>The Form and Objectives of an Analysis of Knowledge,<br/>The Analysis of Knowledge,<br/>Theories of Justification,<br/>A Counterexample,<br/>Justification Without Falsity: A Fourth Condition,<br/>A. Final Analysis of Knowledge,<br/>Introduction to the Literature,<br/>Truth and Acceptance<br/>Truth,<br/>Acceptance and Knowledge,<br/>The Consistency of Knowledge and Belief,<br/>Borderline Cases of Knowledge,<br/>Memory Without Knowledge,<br/>Introduction to the Literature,<br/>The Foundation Theory: Infallible Foundationalism<br/>Infallible Versus Fallible Foundationalism,<br/>The Foundation Theory in General,<br/>The Foundation as a Guarantee of Truth,<br/>Fallible Foundations,<br/>Incorrigible Foundations,<br/>Fallibility and Inference: Summary of the Argument,<br/>Nomological Infallibility,<br/>Meaning and Belief,<br/>Justification as a Logical Guarantee of Truth for<br/>Nonbasic Beliefs,<br/>Phenomenalism,<br/>Objections to Phenomenalism,<br/>Summary,<br/>Introduction to the Literature,<br/>4 Fallible Foundations<br/>Perceptual Belief and Independent Information,<br/>Justification and Innocent Belief,<br/>Semantics and Justification,<br/>Self-justification and Necessary Truth,<br/>Contingent Self-justification,<br/>Probability and Justification: Fallibilistic<br/>Foundationalism, . _<br/>Three Concepts of Probability,<br/>Probability, Truth, and Basic Belief,<br/>Summary: Competence, Success, and Coherence,<br/>Introduction to the Literature,<br/>5 The Explanatory Coherence Theory<br/>The Regress or the Circle,<br/>The Traditional Answer: Coherence as Implication,<br/>Coherence as Explanation,<br/>On the Justification of What Is Explained,<br/>Explanatory Coherence and Justification:<br/>An Analysis,<br/>Objections and Replies to Coherence<br/>as Explanation,<br/>Self-explanatory Beliefs,<br/>Simplicity and Conservation,<br/>Summary,<br/>Introduction to the Literature,<br/>6 Internal Coherence and Personal Justification<br/>Acceptance and Belief Reconsidered,<br/>Justification and Reasonable Acceptance,<br/>Justification, Reasonableness, and Coherence,<br/>Competition Defined,<br/>The Justification Game: Replying to a Skeptic,<br/>A Foundationalist Objection,<br/>The Principle of Trustworthiness,<br/>The Justification Game and the Definition of<br/>Personal Justification,<br/>The Lottery Paradox,<br/>The Advantages of Truth,<br/>Introduction to the Literature,<br/>7 Coherence, Truth, and Undefeated Justification<br/>The Uncharitable Possibility of Error,<br/>Verific Justification,<br/>A Solution: Defeat and the Ultra<br/>Justification Game,<br/>Truth Connection and the Isolation Objection,<br/>Perception, Memory, and Introspection,<br/>A Definition of Undefeated Justification,<br/>Knowledge Reduced to Undefeated Justification,<br/>Determining Justification,<br/>Introduction to the Literature,<br/>8 ExternALiSM and Epistemology Naturalized<br/>Naturalism,<br/>The Advantages of Externalism,<br/>Knowing That One Knows: Rejection of Deductive<br/>Closure,<br/>The Naturalistic Relation,<br/>Objections to Externalism: Information Without<br/>Knowledge,<br/>Externalism and Justification,<br/>Complete Justification and Reliabilism,<br/>Causation and Justification: The Basing Relation,<br/>Reliability and the Justification Game,<br/>Externalism, Foundationalism, and Coherence:<br/>An Ecumenical Reconsideration,<br/>Introduction to the Literature,<br/>9 Skepticism<br/>Skepticism and Agnoiology,<br/>Conception and the Chance of Error,<br/>A Refutation of Skepticism: Fallibility, Not<br/>Ignorance,<br/>The Merits of Skepticism,<br/>Skepticism and Closure: An Externalist Caveat,<br/>Introduction to the Literature, |