@@ -1,4 +1,14 @@-Belief can only occur where acceptance is not compelled, for if acceptance is compelled, then belief is not required to accept that thing. Belief is thus the acceptance of some thing as being provisionally true where:
+VirusLexicon
+
+Belief can only occur where acceptance is not compelled, for if [
acceptance]
is compelled, then belief is not required to accept that thing. Belief is thus the acceptance of some thing as being provisionally true where:
- contradictory evidence exists which throws doubt upon or compels the rejection of the thing being accepted as truth.
- insufficient evidence exists to compel or suggest acceptance of the thing as truth.
+
+----
+
+Alternatively an [agent] can be attributed a [belief] in X when it acts[1] as if X is true. This sense of the word seems to be more common (in North America) and in the philosophical literature I've read.
+
+--DavidLucifer
+
+[1] Assuming that the act is sincere, that is, without deception or sarcasm.