Abstract
Recently a number of philosophers have argued for a kind of encroachment of the practical into the epistemic. Fantl and McGrath, for example, argue that if a subject knows that p, then she is rational to act as if p (Fantl and McGrath, Phil Phenomenol Res LXXV(3):558-589, 2007). In this paper I make a preliminary case for what we might call encroachment in, not knowledge or justification, but epistemic excellence, recent accounts of which include those of Roberts and Wood (Intellectual virtues: an essay in regulative epistemology, 2007), Bishop and Trout (Epistemology and the psychology of human judgment, 2005), and Baehr (The inquiring mind, 2011). I believe that practical considerations bear on whether a disposition is an epistemic excellence, and I propose a practical condition on epistemic excellence that is roughly analogous to the practical condition on knowledge proposed by Fantl and McGrath. Since the view is also an epistemic analogue to a kind of moral rationalism in ethics, we might also call it a variety of 'epistemic rationalism'.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 3929-3952 |
| Number of pages | 24 |
| Journal | Synthese |
| Volume | 190 |
| Issue number | 17 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Nov 2013 |
Keywords
- Epistemic excellence
- Epistemic ideals
- Epistemic virtue
- Eudaimonia
- Intellectual virtue
- Interest-relativity
- Moral encroachment
- Pragmatic encroachment
- Strategic Reliabilism