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Veridical

Veridical is an adjective meaning truthful or accurate, especially as it relates to correspondence with reality or fact. The term originates from the Latin veridicus, from verus “true” and dicere “to say.” In everyday language, veridical reports or memories are those that align with what actually happened.

In philosophy, cognitive science, and related fields, veridicality refers to the success of a representation, perception,

In epistemology and the philosophy of mind, veridicality helps analyze sources of knowledge, such as sensory

or
belief
in
tracking
the
external
world.
A
veridical
perception
is
one
that
correctly
mirrors
the
properties
of
objects
and
events.
By
contrast,
illusory
or
non-veridical
perceptions
misrepresent
reality.
The
term
is
also
used
to
describe
beliefs
or
memories
that
are
true;
some
discussions
add
that
such
veridical
beliefs
are
properly
justified,
while
others
distinguish
truth
from
justification
more
explicitly.
perception
or
memory.
In
legal
or
historical
contexts,
a
testimony
may
be
described
as
veridical
if
it
faithfully
recounts
events.
Overall,
veridicality
concerns
the
accuracy
and
truthfulness
of
experiences,
reports,
or
judgments
in
relation
to
the
real
world.