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Skeptical

Skeptical is an adjective that describes an attitude of doubt or a questioning stance toward claims, beliefs, or statements. A skeptical person tends to require evidence before accepting conclusions and may challenge assumptions rather than taking them at face value. The related noun is skepticism, and the adverb is skeptically.

Etymology: The word comes from the Late Latin scepticus, via the Greek skeptikos, from skeptesthai “to look

In philosophy, skepticism refers to a school of thought that questions the possibility of certain knowledge.

In contemporary usage, being skeptical usually means requiring strong evidence for new claims, especially extraordinary ones,

See also: skeptic, skepticism, Pyrrho, Sextus Empiricus, scientific skepticism.

at,
inspect.”
The
spelling
with
“p”
reflects
the
Greek
root;
the
sense
of
doubt
persists
across
historical
periods
in
both
everyday
and
scholarly
use.
Ancient
skepticism
includes
Pyrrhonian
and
Academic
strands,
while
modern
epistemic
skepticism
questions
the
reliability
of
beliefs
about
the
external
world.
Some
philosophers
use
skepticism
as
a
methodological
tool
to
test
claims,
not
as
a
blanket
denial
of
knowledge;
in
science
and
critical
inquiry,
doubt
is
often
used
to
demand
evidence
and
reproducibility.
and
avoiding
credulity.
Skepticism
is
a
common
stance
in
science,
journalism,
and
critical
thinking,
where
claims
are
assessed
against
available
evidence
rather
than
appeal
to
authority
or
tradition.