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Contextualising KnowledgeEpistemology and Semantics$
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Jonathan Jenkins Ichikawa

Print publication date: 2017

Print ISBN-13: 9780199682706

Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: July 2017

DOI: 10.1093/oso/9780199682706.001.0001

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“Knowledge”

“Knowledge”

Chapter:
(p.11) 1 “Knowledge”
Source:
Contextualising Knowledge
Author(s):

Jonathan Jenkins Ichikawa

Publisher:
Oxford University Press
DOI:10.1093/oso/9780199682706.003.0002

This chapter explains contextualism about knowledge ascriptions—the idea that the content expressed by a sentence containing “knows” varies according to the conversational context of the speaker. It articulates and develops a form of contextualism based closely on David Lewis's “relevant alternatives” approach to knowledge. Special attention is given to the idea and proper understanding of an “epistemic standard”—important questions about the relationship between contextualism and rival views turn on this notion. On the approach of the chapter, epistemic standards interact with subject situations to produce sets of relevant alternatives. The chapter also provides some novel linguistic motivations for a contextualism of this sort, and raises questions about how it fits into ideas about broader theoretical roles for knowledge. Those questions define the project of the remainder of the book.

Keywords:   knowledge, contextualism, epistemic standards, David Lewis, relevant alternatives

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