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Intellectual humility is the acceptance that one's beliefs and opinions could be wrong. Other characteristics which may accompany intellectual humility include a low concern for status and an acceptance of one's intellectual limitations. Intellectual humility is often described as an intellectual virtue. It is contrasted with other perceived virtues and vices such as open-mindedness, intellectual courage, arrogance, vanity and servility. It can be understood as lying between the extremes of intellectual arrogance/servility or diffidence, and intellectual dogmatism/timidity.

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  • Intellectual humility is the acceptance that one's beliefs and opinions could be wrong. Other characteristics which may accompany intellectual humility include a low concern for status and an acceptance of one's intellectual limitations. Intellectual humility is often described as an intellectual virtue. It is contrasted with other perceived virtues and vices such as open-mindedness, intellectual courage, arrogance, vanity and servility. It can be understood as lying between the extremes of intellectual arrogance/servility or diffidence, and intellectual dogmatism/timidity. (en)
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  • Church (en)
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dbp:1loc
  • Part I: Theory. 2. What Is An Intellectual Virtue?. §5: Is Intellectual Humility an Intellectual Virtue? (en)
  • "as a virtuous mean lying somewhere between the vice of intellectual arrogance and intellectual diffidence " (en)
  • "Whereas humility refers to a variety of domains, intellectual humility pertains to one’s knowledge or intellectual influence" (en)
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  • Rice (en)
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  • Davisson (en)
  • Diebels (en)
  • DeBlaere (en)
  • Jongman-Sereno (en)
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dbp:2loc
  • "is a subdomain of humility" (en)
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  • Church (en)
  • Samuelson (en)
  • Whitcomb (en)
  • Paulus (en)
  • Howard-Snyder (en)
  • Baehr (en)
  • Battaly (en)
  • Jarvinen (en)
dbp:3loc
  • "epistemic virtue that is widely acknowledged as desirable in both the philosophical and psychological literature is intellectual humility" (en)
  • "reflections by Robert Roberts and Jay Wood. They tell us that ―a perfectly rich account of humility‖ requires understanding how humility is ―opposite to‖ fourteen vices: ―arrogance, vanity..." (en)
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  • Porter (en)
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  • Leman (en)
  • Haggard (en)
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dbp:4loc
  • "many philosophers consider it a virtue " (en)
  • "A limitations-owning perspective of IH focuses on a proper recognition of the impact of intellectual limitations and a motivation to overcome them, placing it as the mean between intellectual arrogance and intellectual servility" (en)
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  • Intellectual humility is the acceptance that one's beliefs and opinions could be wrong. Other characteristics which may accompany intellectual humility include a low concern for status and an acceptance of one's intellectual limitations. Intellectual humility is often described as an intellectual virtue. It is contrasted with other perceived virtues and vices such as open-mindedness, intellectual courage, arrogance, vanity and servility. It can be understood as lying between the extremes of intellectual arrogance/servility or diffidence, and intellectual dogmatism/timidity. (en)
rdfs:label
  • Intellectual humility (en)
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