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Introduction
1. Knowledge
2. Truth
3. What Was Francis Bacon Talking About?
4. Questions to Consider
5. Further Reading
6. Questions to Consider
7. Further Reading
8. Questions to Consider
9. Further Reading
10. Knowledge of Appearances, or Phenomenalism
11. Problems with Phenomenalism
12. Conclusion
13. Questions to Consider
14. Further Reading
15. Internalism and Externalism
16. G. E. Moore's Hands
17. Epistemology Naturalized
18. Back to Bacon
19. Questions to Consider
20. Further Reading
21. Logic, Math, and Science
22. How Do We Know the Laws of Nature Are True?
23. But How Do We Know the Laws of Nature Are True?
24. Social Conditions of Scientific Knowledge
25. Questions to Consider
26. Further Reading
27. Observations Are Theory-Laden
28. Pernicious Background Theories
29. Morality of Knowledge
30. The Open Society
31. Questions to Consider
32. Further Reading
33. Seven Fallacies of Highly-Human Thinkers
34. Reflection on the Fallacies
35. Questions to Consider
36. Further Reading
37. Arguments as Occasions for Learning
38. Being Fair, and Even Generous
39. Friendly Adversaries
40. Helping the Discussion to Continue
41. Questions to Consider
42. Further Reading
43. David Hume and Miracles
44. Bayesianism
45. Questions to Consider
46. Further Reading
47. Information in Historical Context
48. Algorithms
49. Knowing through the Internet
50. Some Advice
51. Questions to Consider
52. Further Reading
53. The "Seed Belief" Model
54. Monocasual Explanation, and Cui Bono Inferences
55. Where Seed Beliefs Come From
56. Real Conspiracies
57. Questions to Consider
58. Further Reading
Appendix
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Knowledge For Humans Copyright © 2022 by Charlie Huenemann is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.