This problem, famously highlighted by David Hume, questions how we can justify the assumption that the future will resemble the past.
The "problem" of induction
Please take a moment to seriously consider the argument.
Bonjour
Descartes spurred this type of skepticism.
Cartesian Skepticism
This philosophical view asserts that all knowledge comes from sensory experience, famously championed by thinkers like John Locke and David Hume.
Empiricism
A Priori Knowledge
This philosophical problem asks how we can know that others have mental states like thoughts and feelings, given that we can only observe their external behavior.
The father of modern philosophy. Known for his method of doubt.
Descartes
This thought experiment challenged the (JTB) understanding in a short 1963 publication.
Gettier Cases
Strong Conception of Knowledge
This problem was famously addressed by Descartes in his quest to defeat radical skepticism.
The "problem" of the external world.
Famously articulated the problem of induction.
David Hume
Simulation Theory
It's just self evident.
Foundationalism
I sit and speak "cogito, ergo sum".
Descartes
"You didn't know that, you just got lucky"
The Gettier "problem"
Author of "Is 'Epistemology Naturalized' Really Epistemology?" as well as "An Orthodox Critique of Natural Theology"
FDA
Less commonly know as cerebral matter stored in a mason jar.
Brain in a Vat
Behold the system of knowledge, and its notable consistency.
Coherentism
"Beware your presuppositions"
This philosopher challenged the analytic-synthetic distinction and enjoyed discussing a certain "web".
Willard Quine
This skeptical idea sounds more like a horror movie character.
The Evil Demon
Justifications must be accessible to the believer.
Internalism
I am the epistemological view that we cannot truly know anything about the external world because our knowledge is always shaped by the way we perceive it. What am I?
Phenomenalism