“…(For a classic defense of sensitivity as a necessary condition for knowledge, see Nozick, ; for a classic defense of safety as a necessary condition for knowledge, see Williamson, ; for a classic statement of a preference for safety over sensitivity as a way of cashing out a sort of luck precluded by knowledge, see Pritchard, , §6.7; for a discussion of an alternative, virtue‐theoretic way of cashing out the notion, see Pritchard, , §7.) It is true that cashing it out in either of those modal ways runs into problems with necessary truths, because both sensitivity and safety seem to be trivially satisfied for such truths (Roland & Cogburn, ). And this might prove difficult for a non‐trivial application in our case, because GMTs might be necessary: necessarily true if true and necessarily false if false.…”