concept
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concept:doxastic-justificationDoxastic Justification
The justification of a belief itself, often externalist, not necessarily linked to consciousness.
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artifact
- The working paper itself, presenting a pluralist theory of moral standing and arguing that autonomy can ground moral standing without welfare subjectivity.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- The sense in which a person is justified in holding a belief, tied to phenomenal consciousness.
- Operational criterion for strategic deception: CoT steps demonstrate causal link between deception and goal achievement
- Model outputs influenced by information from training documents not present in context; relevant to synthetic document fine-tuning results
- Warns against naively privileging humans over digital minds with equal or greater moral status
- Personal justification (and thus epistemic rationality) requires phenomenal consciousness.claim0.675A route to showing autonomy may entail consciousness.
- CIMC's methodology for evaluating whether a built system is conscious: combining multiple forms of evidence including predicted functional organization and developmental trajectories
- Portrait of an autonomous agent for the argument.