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{{Theory|Title=#REDIRECT: [[Epistemic Stances Towards Theories - Scientificity Acceptance Use and Pursuit|Theory Type=Descriptive|Formulation Text=The list of possible stances towards a theory includes ''scientificity'', ''acceptance'', ''use'', and ''pursuit''.|Topic=Epistemic Stances Towards Theories|Authors List=Ameer (Sarwar, Patrick -Fraser,|Formulated Year=2018|Description=It is postulated by Sarwar and Fraser that in addition to the already accepted epistemic stances that epistemic agents may take towards theories, ''scientificity'' is a unique and independent stance that agents can also take towards theories.[[CiteRef::Sarwar and Fraser (-2018)]] In particular, if a theory satisfies the demarcation criteria employed by a particular agent, then that agent considers the theory to be scientific. If the theory does not satisfy the its demarcation criteria, then the theory is taken to be unscientific. If assessment is inconclusive, the theory may be taken as scientific, unscientific, or uncertain. Sarwar and Fraser argue that scientific communities take the stance of scientificity or unscientificity independent of whether those theories are accepted, unaccepted, used, unused, pursued, or unpursued. As such, scientificity is a distinct epistemic stance.|Resource=Sarwar and Fraser (2018)|History=It is accepted in scientonomy that epistemic agents may take a variety of epistemic stances towards theories, including ''acceptance'', ''use'', and ''pursuit''. However, it is recognized that this list is by no means exhausitve.|Page Status=Stub}}