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Closing the Conceptual Gap in Epistemic Injustice Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Martina Fürst
Miranda Fricker’s insightful work on epistemic injustice discusses two forms of epistemic injustice—testimonial injustice and hermeneutical injustice. Hermeneutical injustice occurs when the victim lacks the interpretative resources to make sense of her experience, and this lacuna can be traced down to a structural injustice. In this paper, I provide one model of how to fill the conceptual gap in hermeneutical
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Why Dreaming Worlds aren’t Nearby Possible Worlds Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2023-03-13 James Simpson
A familiar anti-sceptical response (à la Sosa) to radical sceptical scenarios employs the safety of knowledge. Radical sceptical scenarios are purported to be too modally remote to really threaten knowledge of ordinary propositions. Why? Because knowledge requires safety, and safety requires the target belief to be true in all nearby possible worlds, but radical sceptical scenarios purportedly take
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How to Express Implicit Attitudes Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Elmar Unnsteinsson
I argue that what speakers mean or express can be determined by their implicit or unconscious states, rather than explicit or conscious states. Further, on this basis, I show that the sincerity conditions for utterances can also be fixed by implicit states. This is a surprising result, which goes against common assumptions about speech acts and sincerity. Roughly, I argue that the result is implied
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Can We have Justified Beliefs about Fundamental Properties? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2023-02-24 Darren Bradley
An attractive picture of the world is that some features are metaphysically fundamental and others are derivative, with the derivative features grounded in the fundamental features. But how do we have justified beliefs about which features are fundamental? What is the epistemology of fundamentality? I sketch a response in this paper. The guiding idea is that the same properties cause the same experiences
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On the Epistemic Significance of Perceptual Structure Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2023-02-20 Dominic Alford-Duguid
Our awareness of the boundedness of the spatial sensory field—a paradigmatic structural feature of visual experience—possesses a distinctive epistemic role. Properly understood, this result undermines a widely assumed picture of how visual experience permits us to learn about the world. This paper defends an alternative picture in which visual experience provides at least two kinds of non-inferential
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Blameworthiness and Dependence Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2023-02-11 Randolph Clarke, Piers Rawling
Some recent accounts of blameworthiness present this property as response-dependent: an agent is blameworthy, they say, if and only if, and (if so) in virtue of the fact that, it is fitting to respond to her with a certain blaming emotion. Given the explanatory aim of these views, the selected emotion cannot be said simply to appraise its object as blameworthy. We argue that articulation of the appraisal
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Criminal Proof: Fixed or Flexible? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2023-01-28 Lewis Ross
Should we use the same standard of proof to adjudicate guilt for murder and petty theft? Why not tailor the standard of proof to the crime? These relatively neglected questions cut to the heart of central issues in the philosophy of law. This paper scrutinises whether we ought to use the same standard for all criminal cases, in contrast with a flexible approach that uses different standards for different
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DON’T STOP BELIEVING: FRAGMENTALISM AND THE PROBLEM OF TENSED BELIEF EXPLOSION Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2023-01-25 Roberto Loss
Giovanni Merlo has argued that a currently popular way to interpret Kit Fine's fragmentalism about tensed facts (which he calls ‘unstructured fragmentalism’) is threatened by the problem of ‘tensed belief explosion’. I argue that such an explosion of belief poses no problem to unstructured fragmentalists.
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The Later Wittgenstein on Expressive Moral Judgements Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-12-07 Jordi Fairhurst
This paper shows that Wittgenstein's later explorations of the meaning of expressive moral judgements reach far deeper than has so far been noticed. It is argued that an adequate description of the meaning of expressive moral judgements requires engaging in a grammatical investigation that focuses on three interwoven components within specific language-games. First, the ethical reactions expressed
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Sense Perception and Mereological Nihilism Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-12-07 Andrew Brenner
In the debate over the existence of composite objects, it is sometimes suggested that perceptual evidence justifies belief in composite objects. But it is almost never suggested that we are perceptually justified in believing in composite objects on the basis of the fact that the phenomenology of our perceptual experiences enables us to discriminate between situations where there are composite objects
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Is Truth Primitive? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-11-17 Jeremy Wyatt
Primitivist theories of truth have been defended by some of the luminaries of analytic philosophy, including the early Moore and Russell, Frege, Davidson, and Sosa. In this paper, I take up a contemporary primitivist theory that has been systematically developed throughout a sizeable body of work but has yet to receive sustained critical attention—Jamin Asay's primitivist deflationism. Asay's major
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Syntax, Truth, and the Fate of Sentences Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-11-12 John Collins
Truth appears to be a predicate of sentence-like structures. This raises the question of what a sentence is (or what it is to be sentence-like) such that it is truth-apt. A natural move is to treat sentences and truth-aptness as somehow conceptually or metaphysical coeval—made for each other. This resolution conflicts, however, with now standard approaches in syntactic theory that treat sentences as
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No Work for Fundamental Facts Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-11-12 Thomas Oberle
Metaphysical foundationalists argue that without fundamental facts, we cannot explain why there exist any dependent facts at all. Thus, metaphysical infinitism, the view that chains of ground can descend indefinitely without ever terminating in a level of fundamental facts, allegedly exhibits a kind of explanatory failure. I examine this argument and conclude that foundationalists have failed to show
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Fiction And Content in Hume’s Labyrinth Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-10-12 Bridger Ehli
In the ‘Appendix’ to the Treatise, Hume claims that he has discovered a ‘very considerable’ mistake in his earlier discussion of the self. Hume's expression of the problem is notoriously opaque, leading to a vast scholarly debate as to exactly what problem he identified in his earlier account of the self. I propose a new solution to this interpretive puzzle. I argue that a tension generated by Hume's
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Alethic Openness and the Growing Block Theory of Time Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-10-08 Andrew J Latham, Batoul Hodroj, Jordan Lee-Tory, Kristie Miller
Whatever its ultimate philosophical merits, it is often thought that the growing block theory presents an intuitive picture of reality that accords well with our pre-reflective or folk view of time, and of the past, present, and future. This is partly motivated by the idea that we find it intuitive that, in some sense, the future is open and the past closed, and that the growing block theory is particularly
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Can Risk Aversion Survive the Long Run? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-09-28 Hayden Wilkinson
Can it be rational to be risk-averse? It seems plausible that the answer is yes—that normative decision theory should accommodate risk aversion. But there is a seemingly compelling class of arguments against our most promising methods of doing so. These long-run arguments point out that, in practice, each decision an agent makes is just one in a very long sequence of such decisions. Given this form
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Pregnancy, Parthood and Proper Overlap: A Critique of Kingma Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-09-13 Alexander Geddes
Elselijn Kingma argues that, in cases of mammalian placental pregnancy, the foster (roughly, the post-implantation embryo/foetus) is part of the gravida (the pregnant organism). But she does not consider the possibility of proper overlap. I show that this generates a number of serious problems for her argument and trace the oversight to a quite general issue within the literature on biological individuality
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Fine’s Monster Objection Defanged Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-09-09 Damiano Costa, Alessandro Cecconi, Claudio Calosi
The Monster Objection has often been considered one of the main reasons to explore non-standard mereological views, such as hylomorphism. Still, it has been rarely discussed and then only in a cursory fashion. This paper fills this gap by offering the first thorough assessment of the objection. It argues that different metaphysical stances, such as presentism and three- and four-dimensionalism, provide
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Inferences from Utterance to Belief Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-09-04 Martín Abreu Zavaleta
If Amelia utters ‘Brad ate a salad in 2005’ assertorically, and she is speaking literally and sincerely, then I can infer that Amelia believes that Brad ate a salad in 2005. This paper discusses what makes this kind of inference truth-preserving. According to the baseline picture, my inference is truth-preserving because, if Amelia is a competent speaker, she believes that the sentence she uttered
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Are There Non-Propositional Implicatures? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-09-04 Arthur Sullivan
Could there be an implicature whose content is not propositional? Grice's canon is somewhat ambivalent on this question, but such figures as Sperber & Wilson, Davis, and Lepore & Stone presume that there cannot be, and argue that this causes glaring failures within the Gricean programme. Building on work by McDowell and Buchanan, I argue that, on the contrary, the notion of non-propositional implicature
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Harm, Baselines, and the Worse than Nothing Account Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-08-29 Daniel Immerman
Harm is one of the central concepts of ethics, so it would be good to offer an account of it. Many accounts appeal to a baseline: They say that you harm someone if you leave them worse off than in the baseline case. In this paper, I draw some lessons regarding what counts as an appropriate baseline and explore what these general lessons reveal about the nature of harm. In the process of so doing, I
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Identity and Purity Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-08-29 Tien-Chun Lo
Recently, a number of metaphysicians have been working on the issue of the metaphysical grounds of identity facts. In this paper, I will survey a variety of accounts of identity facts through a particular lens. These accounts will be examined in light of the so-called ‘purity’ principle, a principle intriguing many discussions on metaphysical grounding in recent literature. The aim of this paper is
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Are Public Reason Liberalism’s Epistemological Commitments Indefensible? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-08-26 Collis Tahzib
Public reason liberalism holds that laws and policies must be justifiable to all reasonable citizens. Recently, David Enoch has offered an impressive and influential argument against the epistemological commitments of public reason liberalism on the grounds that they are ‘highly controversial’. After setting out this argument (Sections I and II), I show how its central claim is ambiguous between two
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How Gene–Culture Coevolution can—but Probably did not Track Mind-Independent Moral Truth Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-08-24 Nathan Cofnas
I argue that our general disposition to make moral judgments and our core moral intuitions are likely the product of social selection—a kind of gene–culture coevolution driven by the enforcement of collectively agreed-upon rules. Social selection could potentially track mind-independent moral truth by a process that I term realist social selection: our ancestors could have acquired moral knowledge
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Fictions that Purport to Tell the Truth Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-08-11 Neri Marsili
Can fictions make genuine assertions about the actual world? Proponents of the ‘Assertion View’ answer the question affirmatively: they hold that authors can assert, by means of explicit statements that are part of the work of fiction, that something is actually the case in the real world. The ‘Nonassertion’ View firmly denies this possibility. In this paper, I defend a nuanced version of the Nonassertion
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Explicating Agency: The Case of Visual Attention Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-07-29 Denis Buehler
How do individuals guide their activities towards some goal? Harry Frankfurt once identified the task of explaining guidance as the central problem in action theory. An explanation has proved to be elusive, however. In this paper, I show how we can marshal empirical research to make explanatory progress. I contend that human agents have a primitive capacity to guide visual attention, and that this
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A Question-Sensitive Theory of Intention Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-07-23 Bob Beddor, Simon Goldstein
This paper develops a question-sensitive theory of intention. We show that this theory explains some puzzling closure properties of intention. In particular, it can be used to explain why one is rationally required to intend the means to one’s ends, even though one is not rationally required to intend all the foreseen consequences of one’s intended actions. It also explains why rational intention is
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Book Review Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-07-07
Markets With Limits: How the Commodification of Academia Derails Debate. By James Stacey Taylor. (London: Routledge, 2022. Pp. vii + 220. Price £120.00.)
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Book Review Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-07-04
Inquiry, Knowledge, and Understanding. By Christoph Kelp. (Oxford: OUP, 2021. Pp. viii + 212. Price £55.00.)
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What the Senses Cannot ‘SAY’ Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-07-08 Jonathan Brink Morgan
Some have claimed that there are laws of appearance, i.e. in principle constraints on which types of sensory experiences are possible. Within a representationalist framework, these laws amount to restrictions on what a given experience can represent. I offer an in-depth defence of one such law and explain why prevalent externalist varieties of representationalism have trouble accommodating it. In light
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Metaphysical Overdetermination Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-07-08 Ricki Bliss
It is widely recognized by proponents of the notion that grounding can be, indeed is, overdetermined. Moreover, it seems safe to suppose that something of a consensus has emerged: grounding is overdetermined and there is nothing about it that we ought to find concerning. Not only is the overdetermination apparently not problematic, metaphysically speaking, but that grounding is overdetermined is not
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Outline of a Theory of Reasons Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-07-04 Vincenzo Crupi, Andrea Iacona
This paper investigates the logic of reasons. Its aim is to provide an analysis of the sentences of the form ‘p is a reason for q’ that yields a coherent account of their logical properties. The idea that we will develop is that ‘p is a reason for q’ is acceptable just in case a suitably defined relation of incompatibility obtains between p and ¬q. As we will suggest, a theory of reasons based on this
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Sharing Burdensome Work Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-06-30 Jan Kandiyali
In this paper, I defend the proposal that certain forms of work—specifically forms that are socially necessary but involve the imposition of considerable burdens—be shared between citizens. I argue that sharing burdensome work would achieve several goals, including a more equal distribution of the benefits and burdens of work, a greater appreciation of each other's labour contributions, and an amelioration
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I Hear You Feel Confident Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-03-08 Adam Michael Bricker
Abstract Here I explore a new line of evidence for belief–credence dualism, the thesis that beliefs and credences are distinct and equally fundamental types of mental states. Despite considerable recent disagreement over this thesis, little attention has been paid in philosophy to differences in how our mindreading systems represent the beliefs and credences of others. Fascinatingly, the systems we
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Dear Prudence Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-02-07 McNaughton D.
Dear Prudence. By Fletcher Guy. (Oxford: OUP, 2021. Pp. xii + 210. Price £55.00.)
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The Mismeasure of the Self: A Study in Vice Epistemology Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-02-02 McKenna R.
The Mismeasure of the Self: A Study in Vice Epistemology. By Tanesini Alessandra. (Oxford: OUP, 2021. Pp. 240. Price £55.)
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Fragmentalism We can Believe in Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-01-31 Giovanni Merlo
This paper argues that what is currently the most popular version of temporal Fragmentalism—‘unstructured’ temporal Fragmentalism, as I shall call it—faces a problem of Tensed Belief Explosion. Four possible solutions to this problem are reviewed and shown to be wanting; two more promising ones risk fostering scepticism about the existence of tensed facts—hence, about Fragmentalism itself. The tentative
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Meaning, Rationality, and Guidance Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-01-27 Olivia Sultanescu
In Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language, Saul Kripke articulates a form of scepticism about meaning. Even though there is considerable disagreement among critics about the reasoning in which the sceptic engages, there is little doubt that he seeks to offer constraints for an adequate account of the facts that constitute the meaningfulness of expressions. Many of the sceptic's remarks concern
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On the Adequacy of a Substructural Logic for Mathematics and Science Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-01-12 Neil Tennant
Williamson argues for the contention that substructural logics are ‘ill-suited to acting as background logics for science’. That contention, if true, would be very important, but it is refutable, given what is already known about certain substructural logics. Classical Core Logic is a substructural logic, for it eschews the structural rules of Thinning and Cut and has Reflexivity as its only structural
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Recent Experimental Philosophy on Joint Action: Do We Need a New Normativism About Collective Action? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2022-01-06 Löhr G.
AbstractThere are two general views that social ontologists currently defend concerning the nature of joint intentional action. According to ‘non-normativists’, for a joint action to be established, we need to align certain psychological states in certain ways. ‘Normativists’ argue that joint action essentially involves normative relations that cannot be reduced to the intentional states of individuals
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The Epistemology of Debunking Argumentation Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-22 Jonathan Egeland
There is an ever-growing literature on what exactly the condition or criterion is that enables some (but not all) debunking arguments to undermine our beliefs. In this paper, I develop a novel schema for debunking argumentation, arguing that debunking arguments generally have a simple and valid form, but that whether or not they are sound depends on the particular aetiological explanation which the
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Moral Testimony and Re-Conceived Understanding: A Reply to Callahan Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-21 Slome E.
AbstractIn the article ‘Moral Testimony: A Re-Conceived Understanding Explanation’, Callahan argues that her re-conceived view of understanding can explain the issue with deference to moral testimony better than the more traditional understanding-based accounts. In this paper, I argue that Callahan fails to give a more successful explanation of the problem with moral testimony for two reasons. First
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What is Political Philosophy? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-20 Jeffers M.
What is Political Philosophy?ByLarmoreCharles. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2020. Pp. viii + 181. Price £25.00.)
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Coherence and Knowability Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-20 Luis Rosa
Why should we avoid incoherence? An influential view tells us that incoherent combinations of attitudes are such that it is impossible for all of those attitudes to be simultaneously vindicated by the evidence. But it is not clear whether this view explains what is wrong with certain akratic doxastic states. In this paper, I flesh out an alternative response to that question, one according to which
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Fairness, Individuality, and Free Riding Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-17 Christopher Morgan-Knapp
According to most contemporary theorists, free riding on the cooperative contributions of others is unfair. At the same time, obligations to contribute to cooperative schemes can compel conformity with conventional practices, and can do so to a degree that poses a real threat to individuality. This paper exposes this tension between fairness and individuality, and proposes a way to resolve it. The
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Materialism and the Moral Status of Animals Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-16 Jonathan Birch
Consciousness has an important role in ethics: when a being consciously experiences the frustration or satisfaction of its interests, those interests deserve higher moral priority than those of a behaviourally similar but non-conscious being. I consider the relationship between this ethical role and an a posteriori (or ‘type-B’) materialist solution to the mind-body problem. It is hard to avoid the
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On the Logicality of Truth Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-15 Kentaro Fujimoto
Deflationism about truth describes truth as a logical notion. In the present paper, I explore the implication of the alleged logicality of truth from the perspective of axiomatic theories of truth, and argue that the deflationist doctrine of the logicality of truth gives rise to two types of self-undermining arguments against deflationism, which I call the conservativeness argument from logicality
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Is Honesty Rational? Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-10 Giorgio Sbardolini
According to the Maxim of Quality, rational agents tend to speak honestly. Due to the influence of Grice, a connection between linguistic rationality and honesty is often taken for granted. However, the connection is not obvious: structural rationality in language use does not require honesty, any more than it requires dishonesty. In particular, Quality does not follow from the Cooperative Principle
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Centering the Everett Interpretation Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-09 Isaac Wilhelm
I propose an account of probability in the Everett interpretation of quantum mechanics. According to the account, probabilities are objective chances of centered propositions. As I show, the account solves a number of problems concerning the role of probability in the Everett interpretation. It also challenges an implicit assumption, concerning the aim and scope of fundamental physical theories, that
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Morality and Mathematics Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-12-03 Gordon D.
Morality and Mathematics. ByClarke-DoaneJustin. (Oxford: OUP, 2020. Pp. ix + 208. Price £47.49, $64.00.)
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Degrees of Acceptance Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-25 Dinges A.
AbstractWhile many authors distinguish belief from acceptance, it seems almost universally agreed that no similar distinction can be drawn between degrees of belief, or credences, and degrees of acceptance. I challenge this assumption in this paper. Acceptance comes in degrees and acknowledging this helps to resolve problems in at least two philosophical domains. Degrees of acceptance play vital roles
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Spinoza on Expression and Grounds of Intelligibility Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-22 Hübner K, Mátyási R.
AbstractRecent literature on Spinoza has emphasized his commitment to universal intelligibility, understood as the claim that there are no brute facts. We draw attention to an important but overlooked element of Spinoza's commitment to intelligibility, and thereby question its most prominent interpretation, on which this commitment results in the priority of conceptual relations. We argue that such
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Reimagining Illocutionary Force Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-21 Lucy McDonald
Speech act theorists tend to hold that the illocutionary force of an utterance is determined by one interlocutor alone: either the speaker or the hearer. Yet experience tells us that the force of our utterances is not determined unilaterally. Rather, communication often feels collaborative. In this paper, I develop and defend a collaborative theory of illocutionary force, according to which the illocutionary
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Memory, Knowledge, and Epistemic Luck Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-20 Changsheng Lai
Does ‘remembering that p’ entail ‘knowing that p’? The widely-accepted epistemic theory of memory (hereafter, ETM) answers affirmatively. This paper purports to reveal the tension between ETM and the prevailing anti-luck epistemology. Central to my argument is the fact that we often ‘vaguely remember’ a fact, of which one plausible interpretation is that our true memory-based beliefs formed in this
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Knowledge Out of Control Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-17 Valaris M.
AbstractAccording to a thesis famously associated with Anscombe'sIntention, knowledge is a necessary condition of intentional action: when acting intentionally, we know what we are doing. Call this the Agential Knowledge thesis. The Agential Knowledge thesis remains, of course, controversial. Furthermore, as even some of its proponents acknowledge, it can appear puzzling: Why should acting intentionally
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Laws of Nature: Necessary and Contingent Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-16 Samuel Kimpton-Nye
This paper shows how a niche account of the metaphysics of laws of nature and physical properties—the Powers-BSA—can underpin both a sense in which the laws are metaphysically necessary and a sense in which it is true that the laws could have been different. The ability to reconcile entrenched disagreement should count in favour of a philosophical theory, so this paper constitutes a novel argument
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Mapping the Visual Icon Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-15 Clarke S.
AbstractIt is often claimed that pre-attentive vision has an ‘iconic’ format. This is seen to explain pre-attentive vision's characteristically high processing capacity and to make sense of an overlap in the mechanisms of early vision and mental imagery. But what does the iconicity of pre-attentive vision amount to? This paper considers two prominent ways of characterising pre-attentive visual icons
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The a Priori Truth of Modal Rationalism Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-10 Harry Cleeveley
Modal rationalism is the claim that for any proposition p, if it is ideally conceivable that p, then there is a metaphysically possible world, W, in which p is true. If true, modal rationalism must itself be an a priori truth. Moreover, modal rationalism is true just if there are no strong a posteriori necessities. But are there any strong necessities? In this paper, I set out a transcendental argument
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Between Deflationism and Inflationism: A Moderate View on Truth and Reference Philos. Q. Pub Date : 2021-11-09 Moore G.
AbstractThis essay argues for a two-part thesis concerning the deflationist theories of truth and reference. First, I identify two points of contrast between the deflationist theories and their traditional inflationary opponents: (1) they each employ different orders of explanation for the variety of semantic phenomena, and (2) the inflationist is typically taken to be beholden to a reductive explanation