-
1
-
-
0010023896
-
Fallibilist Foundationalism and Holistic Coherentism
-
L. Pojman, ed, Belmont, CA: Wadsworth
-
R. Audi, 'Fallibilist Foundationalism and Holistic Coherentism,' in The Theory of Knowledge: Classic and Contemporary Readings, L. Pojman, ed. (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth 1993), 269
-
(1993)
The Theory of Knowledge: Classic and Contemporary Readings
, pp. 269
-
-
Audi, R.1
-
2
-
-
34249838671
-
Can Coherence Theory Appeal to Appearance States
-
See Audi: 'Whatever coherence is, it is a cognitively internal relation, in the sense that it is a matter of how your beliefs (or other cognitive items) are related to one another, not to anything outside your system of beliefs, such as your perceptual experience' (268). But J.L. Kvanvig and W.D. Riggs, 'Can Coherence Theory Appeal to Appearance States?' Philosophical Studies 67 (1992) 197-217, argue that although 'coherence theorists have universally defined justification as a relation only among (the contents of) belief states,' 'this feature of coherentism is only an artifact of its history and a regrettable one at that' (197). Instead, they recommend that 'coherence theorists ought to devote more attention to the prospects of a coherence theory employing both beliefs and appearances in the class of things over which coherence is defined' (216). Nevertheless, Kvanvig and Riggs do not themselves provide such a theory, and thus they cannot help us understand why philosophers have traditionally been attracted to the thought that experiences can justify beliefs.
-
(1992)
Philosophical Studies
, vol.67
, pp. 197-217
-
-
Kvanvig, J.L.1
Riggs, W.D.2
-
3
-
-
0003498229
-
-
Note that although Cambridge, MA: Harvard niversity Press
-
Note that although L. Bonjour in The Structure of Empirical Knowledge (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press 1985) defends a version of coherentism that assigns a special role to 'observational' beliefs, he defines these in a way that makes no reference to sense experience, as he himself emphasizes: 'According to the coherentist account, observation is not essentially tied to sense experience in the way it is for more traditional views, and thus any sort of reliable, cognitively spontaneous belief, no matter what sort of causal process it may result from, can in principle count as observational' (175).
-
(1985)
The Structure of Empirical Knowledge
-
-
Bonjour, L.1
-
4
-
-
0004859773
-
What is Justified Belief?
-
G.S. Pappas, ed, Dordrecht: D. Reidel
-
A.I. Goldman, 'What is Justified Belief?' in Justification and Knowledge, G.S. Pappas, ed. (Dordrecht: D. Reidel 1979), 14
-
(1979)
Justification and Knowledge
, pp. 14
-
-
Goldman, A.I.1
-
5
-
-
1542513711
-
Epistemic Norms
-
61-95, at
-
J.L. Pollock, 'Epistemic Norms,' Synthese 71 (1987) 61-95, at 61
-
(1987)
Synthese
, vol.71
, pp. 61
-
-
Pollock, J.L.1
-
6
-
-
36749022140
-
Mythology of the Given
-
The importance of this 'process of elimination' argument in motivating foundationalism is suggested by
-
The importance of this 'process of elimination' argument in motivating foundationalism is suggested by E. Sosa, 'Mythology of the Given,' History of Philosophy Quarterly 14 (1997) 275-86: 'On the other side [the side that holds that experiences must justify beliefs] are Schlick, Hempel, C.I. Lewis, and Chisholm, among others. For these it is an "astounding error" to suppose that the mere coherence of a self-enclosed body of beliefs might suffice to confer justification on its members. And it is hard to see what, other than sensory experience, could serve to supplement coherence appropriately so as to explain empirical justification' (278).
-
(1997)
History of Philosophy Quarterly
, vol.14
, pp. 275-286
-
-
Sosa, E.1
-
7
-
-
79956663206
-
-
J. Dancy, ed. [Oxford: Oxford University Press
-
Thus if my argument succeeds, I will be in a position to explain why 'classical foundationalism accepts the act-object analysis of experience' (J. Dancy, Introduction to Perceptual Knowledge, J. Dancy, ed. [Oxford: Oxford University Press 1988], 11).
-
(1988)
Introduction to Perceptual Knowledge
, pp. 11
-
-
Dancy, J.1
-
8
-
-
84979361410
-
On the Adverbial Analysis of Visual Experience
-
127-35
-
F. Jackson, 'On the Adverbial Analysis of Visual Experience,' Metaphilosophy 6 (1975) 127-35, at 127,
-
(1975)
Metaphilosophy
, vol.6
, pp. 127
-
-
Jackson, F.1
-
9
-
-
84979339962
-
The Adverbial Theory of the Objects of Sensation
-
144-60
-
W. Sellars, 'The Adverbial Theory of the Objects of Sensation,' Metaphilosophy 6 (1975) 144-60, at 145;
-
(1975)
Metaphilosophy
, vol.6
, pp. 145
-
-
Sellars, W.1
-
10
-
-
60949412179
-
Introspection and the Self
-
X, P.A. French, T.E. Uehling, and H.K. Wettstein, eds, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press
-
and S. Shoemaker, 'Introspection and the Self,' in Midwest Studies in Philosophy, Volume X, P.A. French, T.E. Uehling, and H.K. Wettstein, eds. (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press 1986), 105-7.
-
(1986)
Midwest Studies in Philosophy
, pp. 105-107
-
-
Shoemaker, S.1
-
11
-
-
85038798793
-
-
I shall not be following their lead
-
Shoemaker, 'Introspection,' 105), I shall not be following their lead.
-
Introspection
, pp. 105
-
-
Shoemaker1
-
12
-
-
0003931945
-
-
New York: Harcourt, Brace
-
I shall not be concerned in this paper with the question o whether the objects of experience are mental or physical (see footnote 21, below), and so I shall take the act-object conception to be neutral on this issue, as does C.D. Broad, Scientific Thought (New York: Harcourt, Brace 1923), 252.
-
(1923)
Scientific Thought
, pp. 252
-
-
Broad, C.D.1
-
14
-
-
0003905788
-
-
O. Kraus and L. McAlister, eds., A. Rancurello, D.B. Terrell, and L. McAlister, trans. (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul [1874] 1973): 'Every mental phenomenon is characterized by ... direction toward an object' (88).
-
See F. Brentano, Psychology Front an Empirical Viewpoint, O. Kraus and L. McAlister, eds., A. Rancurello, D.B. Terrell, and L. McAlister, trans. (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul [1874] 1973): 'Every mental phenomenon is characterized by ... direction toward an object' (88).
-
Psychology Front An Empirical Viewpoint
-
-
Brentano, F.1
-
15
-
-
0003889913
-
-
W.R. Boyce Gibson, trans. (New York: Collier
-
See also E. Husserl, Ideas: General Introduction to Pure Phenomenology, W.R. Boyce Gibson, trans. (New York: Collier 1962): 'If an intentional experience is actual, carried out, that is, after the manner of the cogito, the subject "directs" itself within it towards the intentional object. To the cogito itself belongs an immanent "glancing-towards" the object, a directedness which from another side springs forth from the "Ego," which can therefore never be absent' (109).
-
(1962)
Ideas: General Introduction to Pure Phenomenology
-
-
Husserl, E.1
-
16
-
-
60949386245
-
-
London: Routledge and Kegan Paul
-
G.E. Moore insists upon this point at length in 'The Refutation of Idealism,' Philosophical Studies (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul 1922), 1-30. See, for example: 'We have then in every sensation two distinct elements, one which I call consciousness, and another which I call the object of consciousness. This must be so if the sensation of blue and the sensation of green, though different in one respect, are alike in another: blue is one object of sensation and green is another, and consciousness, which both sensations have in common, is different from either' (17). Broad argues for the same point as follows: 'It does seem clear that, when I have a sensation of a red triangular patch, some things are true of the patch itself (e.g., that it is red and triangular) which it is very difficult to believe to be true of my sensation of the red patch. If so, it seems necessary to hold that the sensation and the sensum are not identical; that the sensum is an objective constituent of the sensation; and that there is another constituent which is not objective and may be called "the act of sensing"' (257).
-
(1922)
The Refutation of Idealism, Philosophical Studies
, pp. 1-30
-
-
Moore, G.E.1
-
17
-
-
0003553033
-
-
Quotations from are taken from the following edition P.H. Niddich, ed. (Oxford: Clarendon
-
Quotations from J. Locke are taken from the following edition: An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, P.H. Niddich, ed. (Oxford: Clarendon 1975).
-
(1975)
An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
-
-
Locke, J.1
-
18
-
-
0004088235
-
-
Quotations from are taken from the following editions 2nd ed., L.A. Selby-Bigge and P.H. Niddich, eds. (Oxford: Clarendon
-
Quotations from D. Hume are taken from the following editions: A Treatise of Human Nature, 2nd ed., L.A. Selby-Bigge and P.H. Niddich, eds. (Oxford: Clarendon 1978)
-
(1978)
A Treatise of Human Nature
-
-
Hume, D.1
-
20
-
-
0142108105
-
What Psychological States Are
-
I am thinking here of the familiar complaint that functionalist analyses leave out the 'qualitative' aspects of experiences. See, e.g., N. Block and J.A. Fodor, 'What Psychological States Are Not,' Philosophical Review 81 (1972) 159-81,
-
(1972)
Philosophical Review
, vol.81
, pp. 159-181
-
-
Block, N.1
Fodor, J.A.2
-
22
-
-
0011211190
-
-
Compare London: Methuen
-
Compare H.H. Price, Perception (London: Methuen 1932): 'The subject or subject-matter about which we think must be somehow brought before the mind, if we are to think about it, and it cannot always be brought there by previous thinking, or we should have an infinite regress. This means that something must be given. And sensing is one of the ways (I do not say the only one) in which subject-matters for thought are given to us' (7).
-
(1932)
Perception
-
-
Price, H.H.1
-
23
-
-
79956663157
-
Singular Thought and the Extent of Inner Space
-
P. Pettit and J. McDowell, eds, Oxford: Clarendon
-
J. McDowell, 'Singular Thought and the Extent of Inner Space,' in Subject, Thought, and Context, P. Pettit and J. McDowell, eds. (Oxford: Clarendon 1982), 140
-
(1982)
Subject, Thought, and Context
, pp. 140
-
-
McDowell, J.1
-
24
-
-
55449109029
-
-
Essays on Berkeley, J. Foster and H. Robinson, eds, Oxford: Clarendon
-
I remain neutral on the question of whether the sensory properties in question are mental or physical; similarly, I remain neutral on the question of whether the objects of sensory experience are mental or physical. My concern in this paper is not to explain how experiences justify beliefs about the external world; rather, my goal is the more modest but also more basic one of explaining how it is ever possible for an experience to justify a belief of any kind. Those who hold that the objects of sensory experience are always mental objects are traditionally known as sense-data theorists; contemporary defenders of sense-data theory include F. Jackson (Perception) and H. Robinson, 'The General Form of the Argument for Berkeleian Idealism,' in Essays on Berkeley, J. Foster and H. Robinson, eds. (Oxford: Clarendon 1985),
-
(1985)
The General Form of the Argument for Berkeleian Idealism
-
-
Robinson, H.1
-
25
-
-
0011238638
-
The Objects of Perceptual Experience II
-
and 'The Objects of Perceptual Experience II,' Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 64 (1990) 151-66.
-
(1990)
Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society
, Issue.SUPPL. 64
, pp. 151-166
-
-
-
26
-
-
53249093956
-
The Theory of Appearing Defended
-
Those who hold that the objects of sensory experience are sometimes familiar medium-sized physical objects (i.e., tables and chairs) generally subscribe to what is referred to as the disjunctive conception of experience; for discussion of the disjunctive conception, see, for example, H. Langsam, 'The Theory of Appearing Defended,' Philosophical Studies 87 (1997) 33-59;
-
(1997)
Philosophical Studies
, vol.87
, pp. 33-59
-
-
Langsam, H.1
-
27
-
-
0011182281
-
Criteria, Defeasibility, and Knowledge
-
'Singular Thought and the Extent of Inner Space
-
J. McDowell, 'Criteria, Defeasibility, and Knowledge,' Proceedings of the British Academy 68 (1982) 455-79 and 'Singular Thought and the Extent of Inner Space';
-
(1982)
Proceedings of the British Academy
, vol.68
, pp. 455-479
-
-
McDowell, J.1
-
28
-
-
61049237799
-
Experience, Vision, and Causation
-
J. Dancy,ed, Oxford: Oxford University Press
-
and P. Snowdon, 'Experience, Vision, and Causation,' in Perceptual Knowledge, J. Dancy, ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press 1981)
-
(1981)
Perceptual Knowledge
-
-
Snowdon, P.1
-
29
-
-
0004158908
-
-
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
-
P.K. Moser, Knowledge and Evidence (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1989), 8
-
(1989)
Knowledge and Evidence
, pp. 8
-
-
Moser, P.K.1
-
30
-
-
0039324069
-
Recent Work on the Basing Relation
-
at 171
-
'A belief is merely justifiable for a person S when S possesses reasons sufficient to justify the belief, but has not made any appropriate connection between the reasons and the belief, and consequently remains unjustified in holding the belief. The appropriate connection would be the belief's being based on the reason' (K. A. Korcz, 'Recent Work on the Basing Relation,' American Philosophical Quarterly 34 [1997] 171-91, at 171). 'In such a situation [i.e., a situation in which a belief that P is merely justifiable] one might believe that P solely for the wrong reason' (Moser, 156).
-
(1997)
American Philosophical Quarterly
, vol.34
, pp. 171-191
-
-
Korcz, K.A.1
-
31
-
-
79956668139
-
-
Oxford: Clarendon
-
See Korcz's review of the recent literature on the basing relation; according to Korcz, 'the standard view is that the correct analysis of the basing relation will be some sort of causal analysis' (171). A notable dissenter to this standard view is K. Lehrer, Knowledge (Oxford: Clarendon 1974), 122-6. For present purposes, I shall simply note my agreement with Goldman's insistence that Lehrer's counterexample to the standard view is unconvincing (22, n.8).
-
(1974)
Knowledge
, Issue.8
, pp. 122-126
-
-
Lehrer, K.1
-
32
-
-
60949385447
-
McDowell's Oscillation
-
Thus C. Wright, 'McDowell's Oscillation,' Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 48 (1998) 395-402, sees coherentism as 'generated by the principle that justification is essentially a rational relation. That seems to require that it can obtain only between conceptually structured items -things that carry or are somehow indexed by propositional content' (395).
-
(1998)
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
, vol.48
, pp. 395-402
-
-
Wright, T.C.1
-
33
-
-
0039745416
-
A Coherence Theory of Truth and Knowledge
-
E. LePore, ed. (Oxford: Basil Blackwell 1986)
-
See also D. Davidson, 'A Coherence Theory of Truth and Knowledge,' in Truth and Interpretation, E. LePore, ed. (Oxford: Basil Blackwell 1986): 'The relation between a sensation and a belief cannot be logical, since sensations are not beliefs or other propositional attitudes' (311).
-
Truth and Interpretation
-
-
Davidson, D.1
-
34
-
-
52649176147
-
-
My concern in this paper is, of course, with epistemic justification, the kind of justification required for knowledge, and so what I am saying here is that holding a belief is a rational thing to do only if the belief is epistemically justified. In other words, I am committed to the admittedly controversial view that the only way a belief can be justified is by being epistemically justified; I am denying, for example, that a belief can be 'pragmatically' or 'practically' justified but epistemically unjustified.
-
(1998)
The Unity of Justification, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
, vol.58
, pp. 27-50
-
-
Mills, E.1
-
35
-
-
0000077356
-
Beliefs and Subdoxastic States
-
My concern here is with conscious beliefs only. I am not claiming that all beliefs are conscious, but I am assuming that only conscious beliefs can be rational causes of beliefs. A conscious belief is a belief in which the subject is related to the content of the belief by means of the relation of consciousness; I remain neutral on the question of whether there are unconscious beliefs in which the subject is related to the content of the belief by means of some different kind of relation. For trenchant criticism of the popular philosophical view that there are unconscious beliefs, in the sense of beliefs that do not have access to consciousness, see S.P. Stich, 'Beliefs and Subdoxastic States,' Philosophy of Science 45 (1978) 499-518.
-
(1978)
Philosophy of Science
, vol.45
, pp. 499-518
-
-
Stich, S.P.1
-
36
-
-
4544241971
-
Causality and Properties
-
P. van Inwagen, ed. (Dordrecht: D. Reidel
-
I take it that most philosophers hold that the laws of physical nature are contingent, and so cannot be known a priori. Even philosophers such as S. Shoemaker, 'Causality and Properties,' in Time and Cause, P. van Inwagen, ed. (Dordrecht: D. Reidel 1980),
-
(1980)
Time and Cause
-
-
Shoemaker, S.1
-
37
-
-
0007287106
-
Causal and Metaphysical Necessity
-
and 'Causal and Metaphysical Necessity,' Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 79 (1998) 59-77;
-
(1998)
Pacific Philosophical Quarterly
, vol.79
, pp. 59-77
-
-
-
38
-
-
79954803706
-
The Nature of Natural Laws
-
and C Swoyer, 'The Nature of Natural Laws,' Australasian Journal of Philosophy 60 (1982) 203-23, who claim that the laws of physical nature are necessary, nevertheless hold that these laws can only be known a posteriori.
-
(1982)
Australasian Journal of Philosophy
, vol.60
, pp. 203-223
-
-
Swoyer, C.1
-
39
-
-
60949445968
-
Sense, Reference and Selective Attention II
-
A. O'Hear, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
-
The notion of attention under discussion here is helpfully elucidated by M.G.F. Martin, 'Sense, Reference and Selective Attention II,' Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 71 (1997) 75-98: 'Arguably, it is part of the manifest image of the mind that we are aware of objects of sense experience in a different way from being aware of the objects of thought, and that this is reflected in the ways attention can relate one to an object of sense as opposed to thought... It is tempting to think of experience in terms of a whole array of items stretching beyond what I have focused my attention on at a time - an array over which I could move my attention, as a beam or spotlight. It is as if I am aware of the whole array at a time, albeit more or less determinately, whether I now focus my attention on one part of it or not; and my awareness of some element of it can explain why I shift my attention from one part of the scene to another. There seems to be no corresponding array of items to shift one's attention over in thought: if we think of thoughts as determinations of attention, then there can be no way of thinking of something without thereby to some extent to be attending to it' (78).
-
(1997)
Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society
, Issue.SUPPL. 71
, pp. 75-98
-
-
Martin, M.G.F.1
-
40
-
-
0001449597
-
Setting Things before the Mind
-
See also M.G.F. Martin, 'Setting Things Before the Mind,' in Current Issues in Philosophy of Mind, Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 43, A. O'Hear, ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1998): 'We can attend to objects that we perceive in ways not present when merely thinking about them... In perception, focal attention seems to range over objects which are already objects of awareness, and a motive for directing your attention to something is to find out more' (171).
-
(1998)
Current Issues in Philosophy of Mind, Royal Institute of Philosophy
, Issue.SUPPL. 43
-
-
Martin, M.G.F.1
-
41
-
-
0039916415
-
Foundationalism and the External World
-
Malden, MA: Basil Blackwell
-
BonJour has since embraced foundationalism; see his 'Foundationalism and the External World,' Philosophical Perspectives, 13: Epistemology, J. Tomberlin, ed. (Malden, MA: Basil Blackwell 1999).
-
(1999)
Philosophical Perspectives, 13: Epistemology
-
-
Tomberlin, J.1
-
42
-
-
0003349418
-
Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind
-
reprinted in W. Sellars London: Routledge and Kegan Paul
-
Examples of such claims can be found in W. Sellars, 'Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind,' reprinted in W. Sellars, Science, Perception, and Reality (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul 1963);
-
(1963)
Science, Perception, and Reality
-
-
Sellars, W.1
-
43
-
-
0004109730
-
-
Cambridge: Harvard University Press, Lecture I
-
J. McDowell, Mind and World (Cambridge: Harvard University Press 1994), Lecture I.
-
(1994)
Mind and World
-
-
McDowell, J.1
-
44
-
-
0004224908
-
-
London: Routledge and Kegan Paul
-
For decisive criticism of this 'separability of distinct ideas' argument, see B. Stroud, Hume (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul 1977), 47-52.
-
(1977)
Hume
, pp. 47-52
-
-
Stroud, B.1
|