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Journal ArticleDOI

Solving the Skeptical Problem

Keith DeRose
- 01 Jan 1995 - 
- Vol. 104, Iss: 1, pp 1
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TLDR
In this paper, Nozick's account of knowledge and skepticism is used to explain why, even though I feel inclined to say that I know the Bulls won their game last night because I read the result in a single newspaper, I still feel strongly pulled toward admitting the (mildly) skeptical claim that I don't know that the paper isn't mistaken about which team won.
Abstract
ed from Nozick's account of knowledge and skepticism. According to SCA, the problem with my belief that I'm not a BIV-and I do have such a belief, as do most of us-is that I would have this belief (that I'm not a BIV) even if it were false (even if I were one). It is this that makes it hard to claim to know that I'm not a BIV. For, according to SCA, we have a very strong general, though not exceptionless, inclination to think that we don't know that P when we think that our belief that P is a belief we would hold even if P were false. Let's say that S's belief that P is insensitive if S would believe that P if P were false. SCA's generalization can then be restated as follows: We tend to judge that S doesn't know that P when we think S's belief that P is insensitive. As is well worth noting, this general inclination explains the operation of nonphilosophical skeptical hypotheses that are far less radical than the BIV hypothesis or even the painted mule hypothesis. Just so, it serves to explain why, even though I feel inclined to say that I know the Bulls won their game last night because I read the result in a single newspaper, I still feel strongly pulled toward admitting the (mildly) skeptical claim that I don't know that the paper isn't mistaken about which team won: I realize that my belief that the paper isn't mistaken is a belief I would hold even if it were false (even if the paper were mistaken). Indeed, after encountering a couple of instances of AI with different skeptical hypotheses plugged into the 'H' slot (for example, the BIV, the painted mules, and the mistaken paper hypotheses), one develops a sense of what makes for an effective skeptical hypothesis and, thus, an ability to construct convincing instances of Al oneself. To make AI's second premise convincing, it is usually sufficient (though not necessary) that H be incompatible with 0. But what about the first premise? To make it convincing, we instinctively look for a hypothesis that elicits in the listener both the belief that the hypothesis doesn't obtain and an acknowledgement that this belief is one she would hold even if the hypothesis did obtain. Upon hearing the hypothesis, typically one can't help but projecting oneself into it. How would things seem to me if that situation obtained? Well, pretty much (or sometimes exactly) as they actually seem to me. And, so, what would I believe if such a "strange" situation obtained? Pretty much (or exactly) what I ac-

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Book

The Philosophy of Philosophy

TL;DR: In this article, the Linguistic Turn and the Conceptual Turn are discussed, along with epistemological and epistemic notions of analyticity in the context of counterfactual logic.
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The Skeptic and the Dogmatist

TL;DR: The authors defend a position dogmatique inspired by l'epistemologie antisceptique de G. E. Moore, which adopts un modele propositionnel de l'experience, developpe une approche positive de la justification de la perception.
Journal ArticleDOI

What's Wrong with Moore's Argument?

TL;DR: In this article, Moore looked at his hands and argued: (1) Here are two hands. (2) If hands exist, then there is an external world, and (3) So there is no external world.
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Contemporary Debates in Epistemology

TL;DR: In this article, Steup et al. defend the notion of a pre-priori knowledge in the context of knowledge closure, arguing that there is no such a prior knowledge.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Scorekeeping in a Language Game

TL;DR: It’s not as easy as you might think to say something that will be unacceptable for lack of required presuppositions, and straightway that presupposition springs into existence, making what you said acceptable after all.
Book

Ignorance: A Case for Scepticism

Peter Unger
TL;DR: Unger as discussed by the authors argues that no one can ever say, let alone believe, that anything is the case, and that we cannot have any realistic emotional ties: it can never be conclusively said that someone is happy or sad about anything.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ignorance: A Case for Scepticism.

TL;DR: Unger as discussed by the authors argues that no one can ever say, let alone believe, that anything is the case, and that we cannot have any realistic emotional ties: it can never be conclusively said that someone is happy or sad about anything.
Book

The Significance of Philosophical Scepticism

Barry Stroud
TL;DR: Stroud as discussed by the authors examines the nature of philosophy by examining the source and significance of one central philosophical problem: how can we know anything about the world around us? Stroud discusses and criticizes the views of such philosophers as Descartes, Kant, J.L. Austin, G.E. Moore, R. Carnap, W.V. Quine, and others.