Rationality and Epistemic Sophistication
β Scribed by Franz-Peter Griesmaier
- Publisher
- Lexington Books
- Year
- 2015
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 219
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
What factors determine whether a personβs beliefs are epistemically rational? Many traditional accounts contend that those factors lie in the beliefs themselves. For example, a belief can fit with oneβs evidence, it can originate in reliable (or otherwise virtuous) processes, or it can cohere with other beliefs (some of which may be self-justifying). In this provocative book, Franz-Peter Griesmaier presents a new picture of epistemic rationality, emphasizing the role of the agent rather than the belief. The rationality of an agentβs beliefs ultimately depends on her epistemic sophistication, which is manifest in the stringency of her standards, in the skill she has in accessing and evaluating evidence, and in the wisdom she displays in choosing contextually appropriate standards. To be epistemically rational means, in this view, that one has discharged oneβs epistemic duties by using the contextually proper standards for finding and evaluating the available evidence during the process of belief formation. In the course of defending this view, Griesmaier discusses a wide variety of topics from the perspective of a unifying framework. These topics include the possibility of lucky justification, the importance of error avoidance, the problem of simplicity, various forms of evidentialism, doxastic voluntarism, epistemic deontologism, the question of beliefβs aim, contextualism, and the connections between his account and formal models of justification and knowledge, such as epistemic and justification logics.
β¦ Subjects
Knowledge, Theory of. ; Belief and doubt.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this book, Andy Mueller examines the ways in which epistemic and practical rationality are intertwined. In the first part, he presents an overview of the contemporary debates about epistemic norms for practical reasoning, and defends the thesis that epistemic rationality can make one practically
This book is the result of a research project begun by the author in 1958 with the aim of answering two questions: First, what is the rationality of the economic systems that appear and disappear throughout history'in other words, what is their hidden logic and the underlying necessity for them to e