Any ontological and metaphysical postulations we make can claim epistemic justification, only if they are grounded in our experience of the world.
He has since rejected this account of simplicity, purportedly because it fails to provide an epistemic justification for simplicity.
Evidentialists may respond to this criticism by forming a distinction between pragmatic or prudential justification and epistemic justification.
Sosa argued that an appeal to intellectual virtue could resolve the conflict between foundationalists and coherentists over the structure of epistemic justification.
In Fellmann's view epistemic justification of single actions is not sufficient to support man as a being in constant need of justification of his contingent existence.
The coherentist theory of justification characterizes epistemic justification as a property of a belief only if that belief is a member of a coherent set.
"The structure of epistemic justification," American Philosophical Quarterly, 1970.
Other subjects on which Swinburne writes include personal identity (in which he espouses a view based on the concept of a soul), and epistemic justification.
Intellectual responsibility (also known as epistemic responsibility) is a philosophical concept related to that of epistemic justification.
Combining Alston's interests in epistemic justification and religious language, it has been praised by Alvin Plantinga.