Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
0
Published in 2020 at "Synthese"
DOI: 10.1007/s11229-020-02879-7
Abstract: How should we respond to evidence when our evidence indicates that we are rationally impaired? I will defend a novel answer based on the analogy between self-doubt and memory loss. To believe that one is…
read more here.
Keywords:
self doubt;
memory loss;
bayesianism self;
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
0
Published in 2020 at "Criminal Law and Philosophy"
DOI: 10.1007/s11572-020-09528-7
Abstract: Sometimes, the availability of more evidence for a conclusion provides a reason to believe in its falsity. This counter-intuitive phenomenon is related to the idea of higher - order evidence , which has attracted broad…
read more here.
Keywords:
reasonable self;
doubt;
law;
evidence ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2017 at "Psychology of Sport and Exercise"
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychsport.2016.10.002
Abstract: Objectives: Research on the relationship between self‐efficacy beliefs and subsequent performance on a task has typically supported a positive linear model. However, these results typically excluded a moderate level of self‐efficacy as an independent variable…
read more here.
Keywords:
task;
self efficacy;
self doubt;
exercise ... See more keywords
Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!
1
Published in 2018 at "Academic Medicine"
DOI: 10.1097/acm.0000000000002046
Abstract: Purpose Mistakes are ubiquitous in medicine; when confronted by error, physicians may experience anxiety, guilt, and self-doubt. Feedback may be useful for navigating these feelings, but only if it matches a physician’s self-assessment; self-doubt and…
read more here.
Keywords:
medicine;
imposter syndrome;
level incompetence;
rising level ... See more keywords