A priori: A priori : A term used to refer to knowledge that is not based upon observation or experience, or to refer to an argument that employs deduction from such knowledge. [100%] 2023-02-08
A priori: The term 'a priori' (Latin, "from what is prior, before", "from the beginning"), when used in reference to knowledge, is, primarily, the idea that awareness, (or consciousness, or sentience), as such, includes a knowledge of things which transcend contingent experience ... [100%] 2023-02-10 [Epistemology]
A priori distribution: The probability distribution of a random variable, to be contrasted with the conditional distribution of this random variable under certain additional conditions. Usually the term "a priori distribution" is used in the following way. (Mathematics) [81%] 2023-09-22
A priori and a posteriori: The terms a priori (Latin; “from former”) and a posteriori (Latin; “from later”) refer primarily to species of propositional knowledge. A priori knowledge refers to knowledge that is justified independently of experience, i.e., knowledge that does not depend on ... [63%] 2023-02-04
A priori and a posteriori: The terms a priori (Latin; “from former”) and a posteriori (Latin; “from later”) refer primarily to species of propositional knowledge. A priori knowledge refers to knowledge that is justified independently of experience, i.e., knowledge that does not depend on ... [63%] 2023-02-04
A priori and a posteriori: A priori ("from the earlier") and a posteriori ("from the later") are Latin phrases used in philosophy to distinguish types of knowledge, justification, or argument by their reliance on empirical evidence or experience. A priori knowledge is independent from current ... (Philosophy) [63%] 2023-07-27 [A priori] [Concepts in epistemology]...
A priori and a posteriori: A priori ("from the earlier") and a posteriori ("from the later") are Latin phrases used in philosophy to distinguish types of knowledge, justification, or argument by their reliance on experience. A priori knowledge is independent from any experience. (Two types of knowledge, justification, or argument) [63%] 2023-08-22 [A priori] [Concepts in epistemology]...
A priori and a posteriori: The terms a priori (Latin; “from former”) and a posteriori (Latin; “from later”) refer primarily to species of propositional knowledge. A priori knowledge refers to knowledge that is justified independently of experience, i.e., knowledge that does not depend on ... [63%] 2023-02-03
A priori y a posteriori: Las locuciones latinas a priori (‘previo a’) y a posteriori (‘posterior a’) se utilizan para distinguir entre dos tipos de conocimiento: el conocimiento a priori es aquel que, en algún sentido importante, es independiente de la experiencia; mientras que el ... [63%] 2024-03-16
A priori and a posteriori bounds in matrix computations: Three sources of errors are behind the lack of accuracy in numerical computations: data errors associated with the physical model, truncation errors when series are truncated to a number of terms, and rounding errors resulting from finite machine precision. Therefore ... (Mathematics) [47%] 2023-09-19
A Priori: A Priori, a phrase used popularly of a judgment based on general considerations in the absence of particular evidence; a logical term first used, apparently, by Albert of Saxony (14th century), though the theory which it denotes is as old ... [100%] 2022-09-02
Probabilidad a priori: En inferencia estadística Bayesiana, una distribución de probabilidad a priori de una cantidad p desconocida, es la distribución de probabilidad que expresa alguna incertidumbre acerca de p antes de tomar en cuenta los datos. Aplicando el Teorema de Bayes, la ... [81%] 2024-05-12
Synthetisches Urteil a priori: Der Ausdruck „synthetisches Urteil a priori“ entstammt der Philosophie Immanuel Kants. Kant bezeichnet damit Urteile, die nicht auf der Basis von Erfahrung gefällt werden, also a priori sind, und deren Wahrheit (anders als bei analytischen Urteilen) nicht auf der Zerlegung ... [70%] 2023-05-05
A Priori Justification and Knowledge: A priori justification is a type of epistemic justification that is, in some sense, independent of experience. Gettier examples have led most philosophers to think that having a justified true belief is not sufficient for knowledge (see Section 4.4 ... (Philosophy) [63%] 2022-07-06
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