Doxastic voluntarism is a philosophical view that people choose their own beliefs. That is, that subjects have some control over what they believe in, so the subject can choose whether or not to trust a certain thing. This philosophical view comes from a branch of logic known as doxastic logic, but, contrary to other philosophical views of belief, acoustic voluntarism claims each human agent as its own confidant. Doxastic Voluntarism is under the branch of philosophy known as the ethic of belief.
Philosophers argue that there are two types of doxastic voluntarism: direct voluntarism and indirect doxastic voluntarism. The direct, doxastic immediate socialism is that the person has control over some of their beliefs (eg an individual transforms his beliefs from theism to atheism) and the sudden volunteer volunteer is that the person has unintentional control, through voluntary intermediary action, over several their beliefs (eg researching and inadvertently evaluating evidence).
Video Doxastic voluntarism
References
Maps Doxastic voluntarism
See also
- http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ethics-belief/
Source of the article : Wikipedia