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    If one has no opinion about a thing, or if one's opinion ... — Carmelics
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    Home/Skepticism
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    Supports→True belief is a minimally necessary condition for knowledge.

    If one has no opinion about a thing, or if one's opinion about it is false, then one does not know it.

    SkepticismTruth & Knowledge
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    If one knows that something is the case, one must have some belief or judgment a...True belief is a minimally necessary condition for knowledge.What one believes must truly be the case in order for one to know it.

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    If one knows that something is the case, one must have some belief or ...80%If a person does not regard a proposition as true, that person cannot ...77%A proposition that S does not believe cannot be a fact that S knows.76%Although moral opinions are not genuinely true or false (being optativ...76%

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    Premise (1) appears to follow directly from the nature of knowledge. If one knows that something is the case, then one must have some belief or judgment about it and what one believes must truly be the case. If one doesn’t have any opinion about it or if one’s opinion about it is not true, then one doesn’t know it. To say this much, of course, is not to say that true opinion is sufficient for knowledge, but that one’s judgment is true has seemed to many philosophers to be a minimally necessary c

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