Epistemic Value
Haddock, Adrian (Editor),
University of Stirling
Millar, Alan (Editor),
University of Stirling
Pritchard, Duncan (Editor),
University of Edinburgh
Print publication date: 2009
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2009 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-923118-8 doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199231188.001.0001 |
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Abstract:
This book contains a collection of chapters on value in epistemology. Two themes loom large. One is about the value of knowledge. There are problems deriving from Plato's Meno concerning whether knowledge is more valuable than states implicating true belief but falling short of knowledge. The other theme is about epistemic value in a broad sense. Here the central issue is how to make sense of epistemic appraisal conceived broadly to include evaluation of beliefs with respect to whether they are, for instance, justified, or formed through methods or processes that reliably yield true beliefs. A common approach is to think of truth as the end for the sake of which we value a belief being justifiably or reliably formed. The themes are related. We might hope to explain why knowledge is valuable in terms of the value we place on truth. Yet an interest in epistemic appraisal can lead in other directions. For instance, it can prompt enquiry into why we should value truth, how the goal of truth should be conceived, and why, if at all, we should think of truth as the goal of enquiry. All of these issues are represented in this book.
Keywords: value of knowledge, epistemic appraisal, epistemic value, true belief, goal of enquiry, value of truth, Meno problem Table of Contents
Introduction
1.
Reliabilism and the Value of Knowledge
2.
Is There a Value Problem?
3.
Testimony and the Value of Knowledge
4.
The Value of Understanding
5.
Ugly Analyses and Value
6.
The Goods and the Motivation of Believing
7.
Practical Reasoning and the Concept of Knowledge
8.
Pragmatic Encroachment and Epistemic Value
9.
Luck, Knowledge, and Control
10.
Values of Truth and Truth of Values
11.
Epistemic Normativity
12.
Curiosity and the Value of Truth
13.
The Trivial Argument for Epistemic Value Pluralism, or, How I Learned to Stop Caring about Truth
Appendix
Bibliography
Index
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