Knowness LogoKnowness
  • Subjects
  • Blog
    Login Register
    Knowness Logo
    Knowness Logo
    Knowness Logo
    • Sign In
    • Register
    • Subjects
    • Podcast
    • Blog

    University Taster

    Philosophy – University Taster

    1. 1. Prerequisites
      1. 1.1 Requirements to Pursue a Philosophy Degree
      2. 1.2 Researching the Right Philosophy Degree for You
      3. 1.3 Understanding the Difference Between Philosophy Degrees and Theology Degrees
      4. 1.4 Careers in Philosophy
      • Module Review
    2. 2. Metaphysics
      1. 2.1 What Is Metaphysics?
      2. 2.2 The Ancient Greeks
      3. 2.3 Modern Philosophers
      • Module Review
    3. 3. Epistemology
      1. 3.1 What Is Epistemology?
      2. 3.2 René Descartes and “I Think, Therefore I Am”
      3. 3.3 John Locke and the Blank Slate
      • Module Review
    4. 4. Ethics
      1. 4.1 What Is Ethics?
      2. 4.2 Aristotle and Virtue Ethics
      3. 4.3 Jeremy Bentham and Utilitarianism
      4. 4.4 A.J. Ayer and Boo-Hurrah Ethics
      • Module Review
    5. 5. Next Steps
    Exit
    1. Subjects 
    2. Philosophy – University Taster Pre-16
    3. 3. Epistemology

    Module Review

    In this module, we’ll explore the second branch of PhilosophyThe study of fundamental questions about existence, knowledge, and ethics., which is called EpistemologyThe theory and study of knowledge.. Its key question is “How do we know what we know?” Epistemology explores the nature, sources, and limits of knowledge, and so it is an important topicThe subject chosen by the student to speak about in the spoken language assessment. for us to consider.

    In this module, we’ll go back in time to meet some famous philosophers who contributed to the field of Epistemology. First, we’ll encounter René Descartes on his quest to understand knowledge. Moving on, we’ll meet John Locke and his “blank slate”. Finally, we’ll meet David Hume and explore his “Problem of Induction”.

    By the end of this module, you’ll have met some of the thinkers that challenged previous views of what knowledge is. Let’s get started!

    Continue the lesson

    This section is available to learners with course access. Continue learning with Knowness to unlock the full explanation, examples, revision tools, and progress tracking.

    The remaining lesson content includes further guided explanation, important learning points, and supporting interactive material designed to help you understand and revise this topic.

    Learning activity

    Unlock this topic to view the full activity, worked examples, common mistakes, and additional revision support.

    More content available

    Knowness lessons are structured to build understanding step by step. Create an account or upgrade your access to continue from this point.

    This preview does not include the hidden lesson text, answers, explanations, or embedded interactions.

    Continue learning with Knowness

    Sign up to access the full lesson, predicted grades, revision tools, progress tracking, and more.

    Create a free account
    Terms of Service • Privacy Policy
    © 2026 • Knowness

    Report

    There was a problem reporting this post.

    Harassment or bullying behavior
    Contains mature or sensitive content
    Contains misleading or false information
    Contains abusive or derogatory content
    Contains spam, fake content or potential malware

    Block Member?

    Please confirm you want to block this member.

    You will no longer be able to:

    • Mention this member in posts
    • Invite this member to groups

    Please allow a few minutes for this process to complete.

    Report

    You have already reported this .