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  1. 1 de may. de 2014 · ... Understanding others is a crucial aspect of social life, and we often acquire knowledge about others from various sources. It is believed that second-person knowledge acquisition occurs...

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  2. 30 de may. de 2015 · It’s simply a matter of attending to the phenomena, of taking appearances at face value. The same goes for knowledge of other minds. Going by appearances, there is no possibility of knowing what someone else thinks other than by inference from behavioural evidence. This attempt to present ASYMMETRY as a datum is unconvincing. Here ...

  3. Abstract. What does it mean to know another person, and how is such knowledge different from other kinds of knowledge? These questions constitute an important part of what I call ‘second-person epistemology’ – the study of how we know other people.

  4. How do we learn what we know about others? Answering this question requires understanding the perceptual mechanisms with which we recognize individuals and their actions, and the processes by which the resulting perceptual representations lead to inferences about people's mental states and traits.

  5. 4 de ene. de 2024 · How experts and novices judge other peoples knowledgeability from language use. Brief Report. Open access. Published: 04 January 2024. ( 2024 ) Cite this article. Download PDF. You have full access to this open access article. Alexander H. Bower, Nicole Han, Ansh Soni, Miguel P. Eckstein & Mark Steyvers. 987 Accesses. 3 Altmetric.

  6. 15 de abr. de 2011 · The aim of this paper is to review the latest evidence concerning the accuracy of self- and other-perceptions of personality and show that a complete picture of what a person is like requires both the person’s own perspective and the perspective of others who know him or her well.

  7. This paper provides the framework for a second-person epistemology by examining some of our ordinary claims about what it means to know another person. I describe four conditions that typically characterize knowing another person. Then I describe the psychological grounds of knowing a person.