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Well-Founded Belief: New Essays on the Epistemic Basing Relation (Routledge Studies in Epistemology)

✍ Scribed by J. Adam Carter (editor), Patrick Bondy (editor)


Publisher
Routledge
Year
2019
Tongue
English
Leaves
337
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Epistemological theories of knowledge and justification draw a crucial distinction between one’s simply having good reasons for some belief and one’s actually basing one’s belief on good reasons. While the most natural kind of account of basing is causal in nature―a belief is based on a reason if and only if the belief is properly caused by the reason―there is hardly any widely accepted, counterexample-free account of the basing relation among contemporary epistemologists. Further inquiry into the nature of the basing relation is therefore of paramount importance for epistemology. Without an acceptable account of the basing relation, epistemological theories remain both crucially incomplete and vulnerable to errors that can arise when authors assume an implausible view of what it takes for beliefs to be held on the basis of reasons.

Well-Founded Belief brings together 16 essays written by leading epistemologists to explore this important topic in greater detail. The chapters in this collection are divided into two broad categories: (i) the nature of the basing relation; and (ii) basing and its applications. The chapters in the first section are concerned, principally, with positively characterizing the epistemic basing relation and criticizing extant accounts of it, including extant accounts of the relationship between epistemic basing and propositional and doxastic justification. The latter chapters connect epistemic basing with other topics of interest in epistemology as well as ethics, including: epistemic disjunctivism, epistemic injustice, agency, epistemic conservativism, epistemic grounding, epistemic genealogy, practical reasoning, and practical knowledge.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title
Copyright
Contents
Introduction
PART I The Nature of the Basing Relation
1 A Doxastic-Causal Theory of Epistemic Basing
2 All Evidential Basing Is Phenomenal Basing
3 Dispositions and the Problem of the Basing Relation
4 The Many Ways of the Basing Relation
5 Reasons and Basing in Commonsense Epistemology: Evidence From Two Experiments
6 Inference and the Basing Relation
7 The Superstitious Lawyer’s Inference
8 Prime Time (for the Basing Relation)
PART II Basing and Its Applications
9 Hermeneutical Injustice as Basing Failure
10 Agency and the Basing Relation
11 Epistemic Conservatism and the Basing Relation
12 Can Beliefs Be Based on Practical Reasons?
13 Epistemological Disjunctivism and Factive Bases for Belief
14 From Epistemic Basing to Epistemic Grounding
15 Well-Founded Belief and the Contingencies of Epistemic Location
16 The Epistemic Basing Relation, and Knowledge-That as Knowledge-How
List of Contributors
Index


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