Scepticism and Perceptual Justification
Elia Zardini editor Dylan Dodd editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:1st May '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
One of the hardest problems in the history of Western philosophy has been to explain whether and how experience can provide knowledge (or even justification for belief) about the objective world outside the experiencer's mind. A prominent brand of scepticism has precisely denied that experience can provide such knowledge. How, for instance (these sceptics ask) can I know that my experiences are not produced in me by a powerful demon (or, in a modern twist on that traditional Cartesian scenario, by a supercomputer)? This volume, originating from the research project on Basic Knowledge recently concluded at the Northern Institute of Philosophy, presents new essays on scepticism about the senses written by some of the most prominent contemporary epistemologists. They approach the sceptical challenge by discussing such topics as the conditions for perceptual justification, the existence of a non-evidential kind of warrant and the extent of one's evidence, the epistemology of inference, the relations between justification, probability and certainty, the relevance of subjective appearances to the epistemology of perception, the role that broadly pragmatic considerations play in epistemic justification, the contents of perception, and the function of attention. In all these cases, the papers show how philosophical progress on foundational issues can improve our understanding of and possibly afford a solution to a historically prominent problem like scepticism.
Dodd and Zardini have brought together a fine collection of essays, each of which reward careful study. * Ted Poston, International Journal for the Study of Skepticism *
A volume of excellent new essays * Kelly Becker, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews *
ISBN: 9780199658343
Dimensions: 241mm x 162mm x 28mm
Weight: 718g
372 pages