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The Cognitive Demands of Friendship Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-07-22 Anna Brinkerhoff
Recently, some philosophers have argued that friendship demands that we have positive beliefs about our friends even when such beliefs go against the evidence. Call this the doxastic account of the cognitive demands of friendship. I consider both motivations and worries for the doxastic account before developing a new account: the attentional account. According to it, friendship places demands on how
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On General and Non-General Abilities Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-07-22 Simon Kittle
I distinguish two ways an ability might be general: (i) an ability might be general in that its possession doesn't entail the possession of an opportunity; (ii) an ability might be general in virtue of pertaining to a wide range of circumstances. I argue that these two types of generality – I refer to them with the terms ‘general’ and ‘generic’, respectively – produce two orthogonal distinctions among
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The Apple of Kant's Ethics: i-Maxims as the Locus of Assessment Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-07-11 Samuel Kahn
I want to distinguish between maxims at three levels of abstraction. At the first level are what I shall call individual maxims, or i-maxims: maxim tokens as adopted by particular rational beings. At the second level are abstract maxims, or a-maxims: abstract principles distinct from any individual who adopts them. At the third level are maxim kinds, or k-maxims: sets of various action-guiding principles
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Sentientism, Motivation, and Philosophical Vulcans Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-07-12 Luke Roelofs
If moral status depends on the capacity for consciousness, what kind of consciousness matters exactly? Two popular answers are that any kind of consciousness matters (Broad Sentientism), and that what matters is the capacity for pleasure and suffering (Narrow Sentientism). I argue that the broad answer is too broad, while the narrow answer is likely too narrow, as Chalmers has recently argued by appeal
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Predication and Hume's Conceivability Principle Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-07-09 Hsueh Qu
In this paper, I will make the case that an associative account of predication in Hume seems to allow for impossible predicative conceptions—that is, the conceiving of impossible states of affairs involving subjects instantiating properties or qualities—which violate his Conceivability Principle. The natural response is to argue that such conceptions are not clear and distinct, but substantive worries
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Relativism and Two Kinds of Branching Time Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-07-06 Dilip Ninan
This essay examines the case for relativism about future contingents in light of a distinction between two ways of interpreting the ‘branching time’ framework. The first step of the relativist argument is to argue for the ‘Non-Determination Thesis’, the view that there is no unique actual future. The second step is to argue from the Non-Determination Thesis to relativism. I show that first step of
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Disagreement, the Independence Thesis, and the Value of Repeated Reasoning Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-06-21 Ethan Brauer
The problem of peer disagreement is to explain how you should respond when you and a peer have the same evidence bearing on some proposition P $$ P $$ P and are equally competent epistemic agents, yet have reached opposite conclusions about P $$ P $$ P . According to Christensen's Independence Thesis, in assessing the effect of your peer's disagreement, you must not rely on the reasoning behind your
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Second Thoughts About My Favourite Theory Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-06-09 Johan E. Gustafsson
A straightforward way to handle moral uncertainty is simply to follow the moral theory in which you have most credence. This approach is known as My Favourite Theory. In this paper, I argue that, in some cases, My Favourite Theory prescribes choices that are, sequentially, worse in expected moral value than the opposite choices according to each moral theory you have any credence in. In addition, this
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From the Heterogeneity Problem to a Natural-Kind Approach to Pleasure Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-05-31 Antonin Broi
The heterogeneity problem, which stems from the alleged difficulty of finding out what all pleasant experiences have in common, is largely considered as a substantial issue in the philosophy of pleasure, one that is usually taken as the starting point for theorizing about the essence of pleasure. The goal of this paper is to move the focus away from the heterogeneity problem and toward an alternative
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Issue Information Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-05-31
No abstract is available for this article.
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Your Mother Should Know: Pregnancy, the Ethics of Abortion and Knowledge through Acquaintance of Moral Value Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-05-25 Fiona Woollard
An important strand in the debate on abortion focuses on the moral status of fetuses. Knowledge of the moral value of fetuses is needed to assess fetuses' moral status. As Errol Lord argues, acquaintance plays a key role in moral and aesthetic knowledge. Many pregnant persons have acquaintance with their fetus that provides privileged access to knowledge about that fetus' moral value. This knowledge
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Bearing Witness: The Duty of Non-indifference and the Case for Reading the News Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-05-11 Brookes Brown
Ignorance of current events is ordinarily treated as a moral failing. In this article, I argue that much of this ire is misplaced. The disengaged are no less positioned to do good or dispense beneficence, no more arrogant or complicit than those glued to the headlines. Nonetheless, I contend that citizens do have moral reason to remain informed – they ought not be indifferent to others. This, I show
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In Defense of Constitutivism About Epistemic Normativity Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-04-15 David Horst
Epistemic constitutivism (EC ) holds that the nature of believing is such that it gives rise to a standard of correctness and that other epistemic normative notions (e.g., reasons for belief) can be explained in terms of this standard. If defensible, this view promises an attractive and unifying account of epistemic normativity. However, EC faces a forceful objection: that constitutive standards of
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Measuring Social Welfare by Proximity to an Optimum Population Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-03-21 Karin Enflo
This essay introduces a new type of measure of social welfare, where populations are evaluated by their resemblance to an optimum population, which is an (in principle) possible population with the highest degree of social welfare, relative to some circumstances. Here, it is argued to be the largest possible population where everyone fares maximally well. The new measure is responsive to quality of
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A Partnership for the Ages Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-03-11 Richard H. Dees
Burke suggests that we should view society as a partnership between the past, the present, and the future. I defend this idea by outlining how we can understand the interests of the past and future people and the obligations that they have towards each other. I argue that we have forward-looking obligations to leave the world a decent place and backward-looking obligations to respect the legacy of
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Issue Information Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-03-01
No abstract is available for this article.
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Blameworthiness, Control, and Consciousness Or A Consciousness Requirement and an Argument For It Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-02-28 Michael Hatcher
I first clarify the idea that blameworthiness requires consciousness as the view that one can be blameworthy only for what is a response to a reason of which one is conscious. Next I develop the following argument: blameworthiness requires exercising control in a way distinctive of persons and doing this, in view of what it is to be a person, requires responding to a reason of which one is conscious
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Who Reclaims Slurs? Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-01-26 Bianca Cepollaro, Dan López de Sa
Reclamation is usually taken to be the phenomenon wherein in-groups employ a slur to express pride, foster camaraderie, or subvert discriminatory structures. We provide data showing that, under some special circumstances, out-groups successfully reclaim slurs too. Thus, the mainstream restriction to in-groups is merely an approximation of the correct extension of the phenomenon – of who does actually
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Structural Rationality and the Property of Coherence Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-01-20 Marc-Kevin Daoust
What is structural rationality? Specifically, what is the distinctive feature of structural requirements of rationality? Some philosophers have argued, roughly, that the distinctive feature of structural requirements is coherence. But what does coherence mean, exactly? Or, at least, what do structuralists about rationality have in mind when they claim that structural rationality is coherence? This
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The Black Box in Stoic Axiology Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-01-04 Michael Vazquez
The ‘black box’ in Stoic axiology refers to the mysterious connection between the input of Stoic deliberation (reasons generated by the value of indifferents) and the output (appropriate actions). In this paper, I peer into the black box by drawing an analogy between Stoic and Kantian axiology. The value and disvalue of indifferents is intrinsic, but conditional. An extrinsic condition on the value
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Aesthetic Acquaintance Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-01-03 James Shelley
If, as Richard Wollheim says, the Acquaintance Principle is ‘a well-entrenched principle in aesthetics,’ it would be surprising if there were not something true at which those who have asserted it have been aiming. I argue that the Acquaintance Principle cannot be true on any traditional epistemic interpretation, nor on any usability interpretation of the sort Robert Hopkins has recently suggested
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Fake Dispositional Sentences: Manley and Wasserman's Misstep Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-12-23 Sungho Choi
Manley and Wasserman's PROP account of dispositions has been influential in the recent debate about the nature of dispositions. In this paper, I will bring under scrutiny one crucial step in Manley and Wasserman's reasoning leading to the PROP account. The step is one where they abandon what they call ‘MOST’, the idea that x is disposed to M when C iff x would M in most cases where C obtains. I will
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Creating and Redirecting Threats Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-12-20 Victor Mardellat
In the third volume of On What Matters, Derek Parfit argued that the distinction between imposing a newly created threat on someone and making what threatens some people instead threaten someone else has no genuine moral significance. This article's central thesis is that although there is much to learn from Parfit's arguments, they are ultimately unsuccessful at establishing that the redirected versus
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Relationism and the Problem of Publicity Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-12-19 Matheus Valente, Víctor M. Verdejo
According to a recently developed family of relational views, whether two concepts C1 and C2 are the same is a matter of an external relation in which their tokens stand. In this paper, we highlight the chief contributions of Relationism in the elucidation of concept sameness, present a set of arguments to the effect that relational accounts of concept sameness fail to accommodate a substantive notion
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Why I'm not a Humean Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-12-19 Toby Friend
There is an inconsistency between the access we have to our conscious lives and the Humean thesis of causal generalism. This was first drawn attention to by John Hawthorne, whose argument withstands a number of objections. Nevertheless, it has weaknessess. The first premise must be weakened if Humeans are to be compelled to accept it, and consequently, the second premise will have to be stronger to
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Introspection of Emotions Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-12-13 Bertille De Vlieger, Anna Giustina
We argue that knowledge of emotions essentially depends on introspecting the phenomenology of emotional experiences and that introspection of emotional experiences is a process by stages, where the most fundamental stage is a non-classificatory introspective state. We call such a non-classificatory kind of introspection primitive introspection. We aim to show that, although not sufficient, primitive
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Dreams, Morality and the Waking World Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-12-05 Robert Cowan
Is it ever wrong to cheat in a dream? It has been argued that the conjunction of reasonable claims about dreams with Evaluational Internalism (the view that moral evaluation is determined by factors ‘internal’ to agency, such as intentions) entails a positive answer. This implausible result seemingly provides reason to favour an alternative theory of moral evaluation. I here argue that a wide range
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Issue Information Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-12-05
No abstract is available for this article.
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Existence and Believability Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-02-03 Dominik Kauss
This paper argues that true singular existentials are rationally indubitable. After the claim is clarified and motivated (Section 1), it is defended against objections inspired by Cartesian skepticism and semantic externalism (Section 2), a Fregean fine-grained conception of propositional content (Section 3), Kripke's causal theory of reference (Section 4), a Stalnakerian coarse-grained conception
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The Explanatory Demands of Grounding in Law Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-11-08 Samuele Chilovi, George Pavlakos
A new strategy in philosophy of law appeals to explanatory gap arguments to attack legal positivism. We argue that the strategy faces a dilemma, which derives from two available readings of the constraint it places on legal grounding. To this end, we elaborate the most promising ways of spelling out the epistemic constraints governing law-determination and show that each of the arguments based on them
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Conceptual Engineering and the Politics of Implementation Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-10-28 Matthieu Queloz, Friedemann Bieber
Conceptual engineering is thought to face an ‘implementation challenge’: the challenge of securing uptake of engineered concepts. But is the fact that implementation is challenging really a defect to be overcome? What kind of picture of political life would be implied by making engineering easy to implement? We contend that the ambition to obviate the implementation challenge goes against the very
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Frege's Critical Arguments for Axioms Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-10-25 Jim Hutchinson
Why does Frege claim that logical axioms are ‘self-evident,’ to be recognized as true ‘independently of other truths,’ and then offer arguments for those axioms? I argue that he thinks the arguments provide us with the justification that we need for accepting the axioms and that this is compatible with his remarks about self-evidence. This compatibility depends on philosophical considerations connected
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List and Menzies on High-Level Causation Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-10-07 Jens Jäger
I raise two objections against Christian List and Peter Menzies' influential account of high-level causation. Improving upon some of Stephen Yablo's earlier work, I develop an alternative theory which evades both objections. The discussion calls into question List and Menzies' main contention, namely, that the exclusion principle, applied to difference-making, is false.
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‘True’ as Polysemous Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-10-02 Andy Yu
In this paper, I propose that ‘true’ is polysemous and thus ambiguous. I suggest that the semantic paradoxes both motivate taking ‘true’ to be polysemous and show that the concept truth is indefinitely extensible. In doing so, I explain that ‘true’ is polysemous between the meanings corresponding to the subconcepts of the concept truth generated by such indefinite extensibility. I conclude that the
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Causal Accounts of Harming Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-09-21 Erik Carlson, Jens Johansson, Olle Risberg
A popular view of harming is the causal account (CA), on which harming is causing harm. CA has several attractive features. In particular, it appears well equipped to deal with the most important problems for its main competitor, the counterfactual comparative account (CCA). However, we argue that, despite its advantages, CA is ultimately an unacceptable theory of harming. Indeed, while CA avoids several
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Grounding, Understanding, and Explanation Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-09-15 Robert Weston Siscoe
Starting with the slogan that understanding is a ‘knowledge of causes’, Stephen Grimm and John Greco have argued that understanding comes from a knowledge of dependence relations. Grounding is the trendiest dependence relation on the market, and if Grimm and Greco are correct, then instances of grounding should also give rise to understanding. In this paper, I will show that this prediction is correct
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Don't Stop Thinking About Tomorrow: Attitudes De se and De motu Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-09-07 Eric Winsberg
This paper argues that the classification of propositional attitudes into the de re, de dicto, and de se is incomplete. De se attitudes are widely agreed to be closely connected to de re attitudes. But there is a species of belief that is linked to agent-centered action in the way that de se beliefs are, but is also associated with entities, places, and especially times, under a description. These
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Arbitrariness and Uniqueness Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-09-07 Christopher J. G. Meacham
Evidential Uniqueness is the thesis that, for any batch of evidence, there's a unique doxastic state that a subject with that evidence should have. One of the most common kinds of objections to views that violate Evidential Uniqueness are arbitrariness objections – objections to the effect that views that do not satisfy Evidential Uniqueness lead to unacceptable arbitrariness. The goal of this paper
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Issue Information Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-09-01
No abstract is available for this article.
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Cat-Calls, Compliments and Coercion Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-08-30 Lucy McDonald
In this paper, I offer a novel argument for why cat-calling is wrong. After warding off the objection that cat-calls are compliments and therefore morally benign, I show that it cannot be the semantic content of cat-calls which makes cat-calling wrong, because some cat-calls have seemingly benign content yet seem to wrong their targets (usually women and LGBTQ people) nonetheless. Instead, cat-calling
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Responding to the Timing Argument Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-08-30 Karl Ekendahl
According to the Timing Argument, death is not bad for the individual who dies, because there is no time at which it could be bad for her. Defenders of the badness of death have objected to this influential argument, typically by arguing that there are times at which death is bad for its victim. In this paper, I argue that a number of these writers have been concerned with quite different formulations
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Modeling Descriptive and Deontic Cognition as Two Modes of Relation Between Mind and World Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-08-30 Preston Stovall
I use a distinction between single-minded and indifferent choice attitudes, modeled across maximally determinate plans of action, as a basis for interpreting deontic claims – about what ought, ought not, and may be done – as expressing a mode of relation between mind and world that gives voice to the exercise of practical rationality. At the same time, I use maximally determinate possible worlds to
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Is Normative Uncertainty Irrelevant if Your Descriptive Uncertainty Depends on It? Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-08-16 Pamela Robinson
According to ‘Excluders’, descriptive uncertainty – but not normative uncertainty – matters to what we ought to do. Recently, several authors have argued that those wishing to treat normative uncertainty differently from descriptive uncertainty face a dependence problem because one's descriptive uncertainty can depend on one's normative uncertainty. The aim of this paper is to determine whether the
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The Metaphysical Problem of Other Minds Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-08-09 Giovanni Merlo
This paper presents a distinctively metaphysical version of the problem of other minds. The main source of this version of the problem lies in the principle that, when it comes to consciousness, no distinction can sensibly be drawn between appearance and reality. I will argue that, unless we want to call that principle into question, we should seriously consider the possibility of accepting the conclusion
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Cognitive Instrumentalism about Mental Representations Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-07-31 Samuel D. Taylor
Representationalists and anti-representationalists disagree about whether a naturalisation of mental content is possible and, hence, whether positing mental representations in cognitive science is justified. Here, I develop a novel way to think about mental representations based on a philosophical description of (cognitive) science inspired by cognitive instrumentalism. On this view, our acceptance
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Acquittal from Knowledge Laundering Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-07-29 Juan S. Piñeros Glasscock
Subject-sensitive invariantism (SSI), the view that whether a subject knows depends on the practical stakes, has been charged with ‘knowledge laundering’: together with widely held knowledge-transmission principles, SSI appears to allow improper knowledge acquisition. I argue that this objection fails because it depends on faulty versions of transmission principles that would raise problems for any
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Aesthetic Autonomy and Norms of Exposure Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-07-24 Samantha Matherne
Is there tension in a view of the conditions of being in a proper position to make aesthetic evaluations that is committed to aesthetic autonomy and norms of exposure? I define ‘aesthetic autonomy’ in terms of the Kantian idea that in order to make a proper aesthetic evaluation, one must rely on oneself rather than on any outside source. I define ‘norms of exposure’ in terms of the Humean idea that
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Incapacity, Inconceivability, and Two Types of Objectivity Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-07-14 Nicholas Sars
Many critics and defenders of P. F. Strawson's approach to moral responsibility in ‘Freedom and Resentment’ have attributed to Strawson a claim of psychological incapacity or impossibility with respect to our (in)ability to abandon or radically change the framework of reactive attitudes that constitute (at least) an important part of our responsibility practices. In this essay, I show that commentators
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There Are No Irrational Emotions Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-07-08 Steven Gubka
Folk and philosophers alike argue whether particular emotions are rational. However, these debates presuppose that emotions are eligible for rationality. Drawing on examples of how we manage our own emotions through strategies such as taking medication, I argue that the general permissibility of such management demonstrates that emotions are ineligible for rationality. It follows that emotions are
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What's Luck Got to do with the Luck Pincer? Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-07-08 Jesse Hill
Luck skepticism is the view that no one is ever morally responsible for anything because of the nature and ubiquity of luck. One acclaimed argument in favor of this view is Neil Levy's luck pincer. The luck pincer holds that all morally significant acts or events involve either present luck, constitutive luck, or both and that present and constitutive luck each negate moral responsibility. Therefore
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Spinozan Doxasticism About Delusions Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-23 Federico Bongiorno
The Spinozan theory of belief fixation holds that mentally representing truth-apt propositions leads to immediately believing them. In this paper, I explore how the theory fares as a defence of doxasticism about delusions (the view that they are beliefs). Doxasticism has been criticised on the grounds that delusions typically do not abide by rational standards that we expect beliefs to conform to.
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Faith Entails Belief: Three Avenues of Defense Against the Argument from Doubt Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-23 Joshua Mugg
Doxasticism is the view that propositional faith entails belief. A common criticism of doxasticism is that faith seems compatible with doubt in a way that belief is not. Thus, it seems possible to have faith without belief, and several non-doxasticist accounts of faith are motivated inter alia by the need to account for this type of doubt. I provide three avenues of response: (1) favored cases of faith
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Growth and the Shape of a Life Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-23 Ian D. Dunkle
Why does it seem better to be a pauper who becomes a king rather than a king who becomes a pauper even when each life contains an equivalent sum of goods to the other? Many argue that only the pauper-to-king life can be told as a redemption story and that it is good for you to live a redemption story. This paper calls that explanation into question and proposes an alternative: upward-trending lives
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Empirical Studies on Truth and the Project of Re-engineering Truth Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-21 Kevin Reuter, Georg Brun
Most philosophers have largely downplayed any relevance of multiple meanings of the folk concept of truth in the empirical domain. However, confusions about what truth is have surged in political and everyday discourse. In order to resolve these confusions, we argue that we need a more accurate picture of how the term ‘true’ is in fact used. Our experimental studies reveal that the use of ‘true’ shows
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Issue Information Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-04
No abstract is available for this article.
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More than a Feeling Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Allison Kuklok
I argue for an interpretation of Hume on which our confused notions of causal necessity find their model in Hume's notion of logical necessity: our minds react in similar ways to constant conjunctions, on the one hand, and genuine cases of inseparability between ideas, on the other, in light of which we mistakenly place relations of necessitation between objects we call cause and effect. I argue that
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Thomas Reid on Promises and Social Operations of the Human Mind Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-04 Ruth Boeker
My paper offers a new interpretation of Reid's account of social operations of the human mind. I argue that it is important to acknowledge the counterpart structure of social operations. By this I mean that for Reid every social operation is paired with a counterpart operation. On the view that I ascribe to Reid, at least two intelligent beings take part in a social operation and the social operation
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Homophonic Reports and Gradual Communication Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-02 Claudia Picazo
Pragmatic modulation makes contextual information necessary for interpretation. This poses a problem for homophonic reports and inter-contextual communication in general: of co-situated interlocutors, we can expect some common ground, but non-co-situated interpreters lack access to the context of utterance. Here I argue that we can nonetheless share modulated contents via homophonic reports. First
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The Virtue of Consistency Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Hsueh Qu
Consistency is commonly taken to be an interpretive virtue in scholarship, but the rationale behind this assumption is unclear. This paper explores the question of why we should take consistency to be an interpretive virtue; it finds that while considerations of accuracy might render the issue underdetermined, we nevertheless have reason to take consistency to be an interpretive virtue on the basis
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Seeing-in and Singling Out: How to Reconcile Pictures with Singular Thought Pacific Philosophical Quarterly Pub Date : 2021-06-01 Enrico Terrone
According to the standard view of pictorial reference, a picture produces singular thought in virtue of both its appearance and its history. Zeimbekis (2010) challenges this view, arguing that the perception of the picture's appearance does not contribute to the production of singular thought. The paper defends the standard view from Zeimbekis' challenge, specifying the roles of appearance and history