Defining Knowledge
Post-Gettier epistemology is increasingly modalized epistemology – proposing and debating modally explicable conditionals with suitably epistemic content (an approach initially inspired by Robert Nozick's 1981 account of knowledge), as needing to be added to 'true belief' in order to define or understand knowing's nature. This Element asks whether such modalized attempts – construed as responding to what the author calls Knowing's Further Features question (bequeathed to us by the Meno and the Theaetetus) – can succeed. The answer is that they cannot. Plato's and Aristotle's views on definition reinforce that result. Still, in appreciating this, we might gain insight into knowing's essence. We might find that knowledge is, essentially, nothing more than true belief.
Product details
November 2022Adobe eBook Reader
9781009090476
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. A Quest
- 2. An Hypothesis
- 3. Modalized Epistemology
- 4. Knowing's Further Features Question
- 5. Knowledge and Luck
- 6. An Aristotelian Strengthening of the Argument
- 7. Knowledge-Minimalism
- References.