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    Without cross-cultural and cross-demographic stability, p... — Carmelics
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    Supports→An inductive argument from intuitions about particular cases of justified belief does not support [P1]

    Without cross-cultural and cross-demographic stability, particular case intuitions cannot serve as a legitimate inductive foundation for a universal principle about what justification requires.

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    Key Terms

    Universal principle(as used in aesthetics and logic)
    A rule that applies to all similar cases, not just one specific example—like saying 'every painting with this feature is automatically better.'
    cross-cultural(as used in anthropology and philosophy)
    Something that appears in or affects multiple different cultures and societies around the world.
    cross-demographic(as used in epistemology)
    Involving or comparing different groups of people based on characteristics like age, gender, race, or socioeconomic status.
    inductive foundation(as used in epistemology)
    A starting point for reasoning where you draw general rules or principles from specific examples or observations.
    intuitions(Chudnoff's account of intuitions as the basis of a priori justification)

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    Intellectual perceptions that sometimes reveal abstract reality, possessing a presentational phenomenology that can be evoked through imagination, reflection, or reasoning
    justification(Third condition of the tripartite account of knowledge)
    The condition on a knower's belief that excludes mere luck — the belief must be held in a way that is appropriate or warranted, not merely accidentally correct.
    stability(Precise probabilistic framework; term due to Leitgeb (2014))
    A property closely related to resiliency, describing the degree to which probability assignments resist revision in light of new evidence

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    Truth & Knowledge1 linkedSkepticism1 linked

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    An inductive argument from intuitions about particular cases of justified belief...

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