Abby Summerlin Professor Amy Glaser Philosophy 205 - 006 2nd October, 2022 The Three Beliefs of Epistemology In Ultimate Questions Chapter 3, we go over the different stances on finding true knowledge and whether one can know it or not. We have Skepticism, which believes one cannot know anything; Empiricism, which believes that knowledge is based solely on how one perceives things; and Rationalism, which believes knowledge is based on reason over actions. Each has arguments that have been argued over many years, and each has its own unique set of qualities I plan to explore in this essay. Skepticism is the belief that you can't truly know anything. This is famously argued by Descartes's Dream Argument, which in summary, is the argument that since we can't prove that we aren't dreaming currently, then we can't filter between what's real and what dream. This would mean we couldn't know anything at all. While Descartes later disproved his own the...