General
Scope
Methods and Tools
Perspectives
Ethics
100
a possible scenario when/why justified true belief may not necessarily be counted as knowledge

What is Gettier's Problem?

100

two differing schools of thought regarding the origin and nature of numerical digits in mathematics

Is math invented or discovered? OR Are numbers invented or discovered?

100

the method used by artists in the process of a particular artwork's creation

What is the artistic method?
100

One is the study of the past, the other is the study of how the past is being studied, written and analyzed

What is the difference between history and historiography?

100

a theory that suggests we should look at the consequences in order to determine what is right and wrong.

What is consequentialism? / What is utilitarianism?
200

a theory which states that what is true is what corresponds to reality

the correspondence theory of truth

200

the debate among experts within this AOK on whether something does or does not count as _ _ _ , and whether it must necessarily be beautiful 

What is art? / What is artistic value? / How can we determine what makes something artistic?

200

an instance when the existing underlying principles or belief systems change, such that now there is a new way of examining things. also Thomas Kuhn's Theory.

What is a paradigm shift?

200

the view that something is real, with specific reference to the natural sciences

What is scientific realism?

200

an action by one expert or a group of experts, which then makes their knowledge questionable. think SNUPPY and Hwang Woo Suk.

What is scientific misconduct? Bonus 100 points if you can give another example of this.

300

the concept of knowing how to do something, in contrast to knowing something from experience

What is the difference between skills-based and experiential knowledge? / How can we distinguish between procedural and experiential knowledge?

300

key traits distinguishing these findings from other AOKs, with the common assumption that evidence based on experimentation makes conclusions drawn valid, with replicability.

What makes something scientific? OR What makes something fall under the scope of the natural sciences?

300
According to Michael Shermer's idea of patternicity, people see patterns when they are present or not present. This would then affect the conclusions they draw.
What role do patterns play in the production of knowledge?
300

The school of thought that interpretations should be subjective when it comes to artistic knowledge, as opposed to interpretations being objective in nature

what is artistic subjectivism versus artistic objectivism?

300

the view that something is not real, with specific reference to morality

What is moral anti-realism?

400

the traditional view by some philosophers that knowledge only comes from experience, as opposed to the view that knowledge comes from reasoning. - phrased as the ongoing debate.

What is the distinction between empiricism and rationalism? Or any other question that proposes both empiricism and rationalism.

400

Hume's theory differentiates between relations of ideas and matters of fact. These are known as different ways which experts.... ?

What are the ways in which experts classify knowledge? / What are the different forms of knowledge present?

400

the difference between statistics based research and research based on interviews

What is quantitative research compared to qualitative research?

400

the debate on numbers and how they are obtained - essentially where they come from

are numbers invented or discovered?

400

the notion that historians and morality necessarily go hand in hand when writing textbooks (or considering how textbooks are written)

What is the moral accountability of historians?

500

the study of the theory of knowledge, in philosophical terms

What is epistemology?

500

the question surrounding what events matter enough to be recorded / the question asking the method used by historians to select methods for recording

How can historians establish what falls under the scope of history, in terms of what is an important historical event? /  How can we determine what events are studied or recorded in historical writing? / accept any other reasonable question

500

mathematicians use this to show equations are logically valid

What is mathematical proof?

500

the idea that one needs to combine both quantitative and qualitative approaches for valid research in the social sciences

What is mixed methods research?

500

Michael Huemer's idea that ethics is acquired and assessed through this particular cognitive tool, giving rise to a particular school of thought of how we discern knowledge. 

What is ethical intuitionism? Bonus points of 100 if you can explain it. Bonus of 100 if you can distinguish it from ethical emotivism.

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