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Zusatztext This volume shows a way to do post-Gettier epistemology. ... In addition to casting light on the nature, purpose and value of epistemic evaluation, purposeful epistemology also facilitates progress on a variety of epistemological issues, such as the relationship between knowledge and practical reasoning, the semantics of knowledge ascriptions and the internalism/externalism debate. This is not to suggest that purposeful epistemology is the only method epistemologists should use. But it is, as the editors point out, 'an important an underappreciated item in the toolbox' (3). I highly recommend this book. Informationen zum Autor David Henderson is Robert R Chambers Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.John Greco holds the Leonard and Elizabeth Eslick Chair in Philosophy at Saint Louis University. Klappentext Twelve leading philosophers explore and apply a particular methodology in epistemology, which might be called purposeful epistemology. The idea is that considerations about the point and purpose of our concepts (or epistemic norms) promise to yield important insights for epistemological theorizing. Zusammenfassung Twelve leading philosophers explore and apply a particular methodology in epistemology, which might be called purposeful epistemology. The idea is that considerations about the point and purpose of our concepts (or epistemic norms) promise to yield important insights for epistemological theorizing. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: The Point And Purpose Of Epistemic Evaluation Philosophical Methods and Evaluative Purposes 1: Georgi Gardiner: Teleologies and the Methodology of Epistemology 2: Elizabeth Fricker: Know First, Tell Later: The Truth about Craig on Knowledge 3: David Henderson and Terence Horgan: What's the Point? Contextualism and Pragmatic Enchroachment 4: Stephen R. Grimm: Knowledge, Practical Interests, and Rising Tides 5: Matthew McGrath: Two Purposes of Knowledge Attribution and the Contextualism Debate Does Knowledge Always Require Reasons? 6: Michael Williams: Knowledge in Practice 7: Jonathan M. Weinberg: Regress-Stopping and Disagreement for Epistemic Neopragmatists The Internalism/Externalism Debate 8: Sanford C. Goldberg: What is the subject-matter of the theory of epistemic justification? 9: Declan Smithies: Why Justification Matters Epistemic Norms as Social Norms 10: Peter J. Graham: Epistemic Normativity and Social Norms 11: John Greco: Testimonial Knowledge and the Flow of Information ...
List of contents
- Introduction: The Point And Purpose Of Epistemic Evaluation
- Philosophical Methods and Evaluative Purposes
- 1: Georgi Gardiner: Teleologies and the Methodology of Epistemology
- 2: Elizabeth Fricker: Know First, Tell Later: The Truth about Craig on Knowledge
- 3: David Henderson and Terence Horgan: What's the Point?
- Contextualism and Pragmatic Enchroachment
- 4: Stephen R. Grimm: Knowledge, Practical Interests, and Rising Tides
- 5: Matthew McGrath: Two Purposes of Knowledge Attribution and the Contextualism Debate
- Does Knowledge Always Require Reasons?
- 6: Michael Williams: Knowledge in Practice
- 7: Jonathan M. Weinberg: Regress-Stopping and Disagreement for Epistemic Neopragmatists
- The Internalism/Externalism Debate
- 8: Sanford C. Goldberg: What is the subject-matter of the theory of epistemic justification?
- 9: Declan Smithies: Why Justification Matters
- Epistemic Norms as Social Norms
- 10: Peter J. Graham: Epistemic Normativity and Social Norms
- 11: John Greco: Testimonial Knowledge and the Flow of Information
Report
This volume shows a way to do post-Gettier epistemology. ... In addition to casting light on the nature, purpose and value of epistemic evaluation, purposeful epistemology also facilitates progress on a variety of epistemological issues, such as the relationship between knowledge and practical reasoning, the semantics of knowledge ascriptions and the internalism/externalism debate. This is not to suggest that purposeful epistemology is the only method epistemologists should use. But it is, as the editors point out, 'an important an underappreciated item in the toolbox' (3). I highly recommend this book. Michael Hannon, Analysis