There are three doxastic attitudes an agent can adopt in response to a given proposition: to believe, to not believe or to withhold judgement. What can we conclude about the individual rationality of the agents who, in response to the same set of evidence, come to adopt incompatible doxastic attitudes towards a target proposition? If there exists a uniquely rational doxastic attitude that should be adopted in response to a set of evidence, then we can grant that at most one agent is being rational in any belief-disagreement cases (viz., Uniqueness). Otherwise, we can grant that more than one agent is being rational in belief-disagreement cases (viz., Permissivism). This paper defends two claims: §1 defends a specific variatio...