epistemic

Etymology
From + English  (compare modern 🇨🇬). is derived from (from  +  (ultimately from )) +.

Adjective

 * 1)  Of or relating to cognition or knowledge, its scope, or how it is acquired.
 * 2)  Of or relating to how cognition or knowledge is expressed in language.
 * 3)  Of or relating to ; epistemologic or epistemological.
 * 1)  Of or relating to how cognition or knowledge is expressed in language.
 * 2)  Of or relating to ; epistemologic or epistemological.
 * 1)  Of or relating to ; epistemologic or epistemological.
 * 1)  Of or relating to ; epistemologic or epistemological.
 * 1)  Of or relating to ; epistemologic or epistemological.

Usage notes
Philosophers differentiate the meanings of epistemic and. Broadly, epistemic means “relating to knowledge itself” (see ), and epistemological means “relating to the study or theory of various aspects of knowledge”. Nonetheless, in general usage epistemic is also sometimes used as a synonym of epistemological (see ) and vice versa, and thus the terms epistemic crisis, epistemologic crisis, and epistemological crisis are synonymous, referring to a crisis of community members with an impaired level of shared perceptions of reality, that is, an excessive level of disagreement on what is real or fake, or what is existing or illusory.

Translations

 * Danish:, erkendelsesmæssig
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: episteeminen
 * French:
 * Galician:
 * German:
 * Icelandic:
 * Italian:, epistematico
 * Macedonian: епистемски
 * Occitan:
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian: ,
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Roman: epistemički
 * Spanish: epistémico
 * Swedish:


 * Finnish: episteeminen
 * Galician:
 * Macedonian: