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|Formulation Text=A community that does not have a collective intentionality to know the world.
|Formulation File=Non-Epistemic Community (Overgaard-2017).png
|Authors List=Nicholas Overgaard,
|Formulated Year=2017
|Description=TODOThis definition is meant to highlight the key difference between [[Epistemic Community|epistemic]] and non-epistemic communities. The former are said to have a collective intentionality to know the world, while the latter lack such an intentionality. A typical example of a non-epistemic community, according to [[Nicholas Overgaard|Overgaard]], is an orchestra that has a collective intentionality to play music but lack the intentionality of knowing the world.[[CiteRef: Nick add description:Overgaard (2017)|p. 59]] Another example of a non-epistemic community, according to Overgaard, is a political party. While a political party might have some accepted theories, such as ideas concerning, for instance, effective governance, "a political party would be considered a non-epistemic community because it lacks a collective intentionality to know the world".[[CiteRef::Overgaard (2017)|p. 59]]
|Resource=Overgaard (2017)
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|Page Status=Needs Editing
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