Epistemology A Guide 1st Edition by John Turri – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1444333704, 9781444333701
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1444333704
ISBN 13: 9781444333701
Author: John Turri
- A step-by-step introduction to contemporary epistemology, with coverage of skepticism, epistemic justification, epistemic closure, virtue epistemology, naturalized epistemology, and more
- Explains the main arguments of the most influential publications from the last 50 years
- Contextualizes key concepts and themes, instead of treating them in isolation
- Straightforward and accessible for those studying the topic for the first time
- Designed to accompany the second edition of Epistemology: An Anthology (Wiley Blackwell, 2008), but stands on its own as a concise introduction to the key ideas and arguments in epistemology
Epistemology A Guide 1st Table of contents:
§ 1 The best case for skepticism about the external world? (Stroud, “The Problem of the External
References
§ 2 Proving the external world exists (Or: Let’s all give Moore a hand!) (Moore, “Proof of an E
§ 3 Some ways of resisting skepticism (Moore, “Four Forms of Scepticism”)
§ 4 Plausibility and possibilities (Moore, “Certainty”)
§ 5 Skeptic on skeptic (Klein, “How a Pyrrhonian Skeptic Might Respond to Academic Skepticism”)
§ 6 Realism in epistemology (Williams, “Epistemological Realism”)
§ 7 Socratic questions and the foundation of empirical knowledge (Chisholm, “The Myth of the Give
§ § 8–9 The foundation of empirical knowledge? (Sellars, “Does Empirical Knowledge Have a Foun
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§ 10 It’s not a given that empirical knowledge has a foundation (BonJour, “Can Empirical Knowle
§ 11 Interpretation, meaning and skepticism (Davidson, “A Coherence Theory of Truth and Knowledge
Reference
§ 12 Blending foundationalism and coherentism (Haack, “A Foundherentist Theory of Epistemic Justi
§ 13 Foundationalism, coherentism and supervenience (Sosa, “The Raft and the Pyramid”)
References
§ 14 Infinitism (Klein, “Human Knowledge and the Infinite Regress of Reasons”)
§ 15 The Gettier problem (Gettier, “Is Justified True Belief Knowledge?”)
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§ 16 Some principles concerning knowledge and inference (Harman, Thought, Selections)
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§ 17 The essence of the Gettier problem (Zagzebski, “The Inescapability of Gettier Problems”)
§ 18 Knowledge is an unanalyzable mental state (Williamson, “A State of Mind”)
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§ 19 Closure, contrast and semi-skepticism (Dretske, “Epistemic Operators”)
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§ 20 Closure, contrast and anti-skepticism (Stine, “Skepticism, Relevant Alternatives, and Deduct
§ 21 Keeping close track of knowledge (Nozick, “Knowledge and Skepticism”)
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§ 22 Moore wins (Sosa, “How to Defeat Opposition to Moore”)
§ 23 The closure principle: dangers and defense (Vogel, “Are There Counter examples to the Closur
Reference
§ 24 Evidentialist epistemology (Feldman and Conee, “Evidentialism”)
Reference
§ 25 Non-defensive epistemology (Foley, “Skepticism and Rationality”)
§ 26 Reliabilism about justification (Goldman, “What Is Justified Belief?”)
§ 27 Reliabilism: a level assessment (Vogel, “Reliabilism Leveled”)
§ 28 Against externalism (BonJour, “Externalist Theories of Empirical Knowledge”)
§ 29 Against internalism (Goldman, “Internalism Exposed”)
§ 30 A skeptical take on externalism (Fumerton, “Externalism and Skepticism”)
§ 31 A friendly take on internalism (Feldman and Conee, “Internalism Defended”)
§ 32 Warrant (Plantinga, “Warrant: A First Approximation”)
Reference
§ 33 Intellectual virtues (Zagzebski, Virtues of the Mind)
§ 34 Virtue epistemology (Greco, “Virtues and Vices of Virtue Epistemology”)
§ 35 Knowledge, luck and virtue (Pritchard, “Cognitive Responsibility and the Epistemic Virtues
References
§ 36 Epistemic value and cognitive achievement (Sosa, “The Place of Truth in Epistemology”)
§ 37 Giving up on knowledge (Kvanvig, “Why Should Inquiring Minds Want to Know?”)
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§ 38 Giving up on (exact) truth (Elgin, “True Enough”)
§ 39 Naturalized epistemology advertised (Quine, “Epistemology Naturalized”)
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§ 40 Naturalized epistemology criticized (Kim, “What is ‘Naturalized Epistemology’?”)
§ 41 Naturalized epistemology radicalized (Antony, “Quine as Feminist”)
§ 42 A apriori justification and unrevisability (Putnam, “There is at Least One A Priori Truth”
§ 43 A priori justification and revisability (Casullo, “Revisability, Reliabilism, and A Priori K
§ 44 Philosophical method and empirical science (Bealer, “A Priori Knowledge and the Scope of Phi
§ 45 Experimental epistemology (Weinberg, Nichols and Stich, “Normativity and Epistemic Intuition
§ 46 Natural kinds, intuitions and method in epistemology (Kornblith, “Investigating Knowledge It
Reference
§ 47 Contextualism and skeptical puzzles (DeRose, “Solving the Skeptical Problem”)
§ 48 Contextualism and infallibilist intuitions (Lewis, “Elusive Knowledge”)
§ 49 Contextualism and intuitional instability (Cohen, “Contextualist Solutions to Epistemologica
§ 50 Knowledge and action (Stanley, “Knowledge and Practical Interests, Selections”)
Reference
§ 51 Rationality and action (Fantl and McGrath, “Evidence, Pragmatics, and Justification”)
§ 52 One invariantist’s scorecard (Hawthorne, “Sensitive Moderate Invariantism”)
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§ 53 A relativist theory of knowledge attributions (MacFarlane, “The Assessment Sensitivity of Kn
§ 54 Rationality and trust (Baker, “Trust and Rationality”)
§ 55 Testimony and gullibility (Fricker, “Against Gullibility”)
§ 56 Some reflections on how epistemic sources work (Burge, “Content Preservation”)
§ 57 Testimony and knowledge (Lackey, “Testimonial Knowledge and Transmission”)
Reference
§ 58 Memory and knowledge (Huemer, “The Problem of Memory Knowledge”)
§ 59 Perception and knowledge (McDowell, “Criteria, Defeasibility, and Knowledge”)
§ 60 Skills and knowledge (Reynolds, “Knowing How to Believe with Justification”)
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Tags: John Turri, Epistemology


