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Ownership, Authorship and External Justification

Authors :
Jennifer Duke-Yonge
Source :
Acta Analytica. 28:237-252
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2012.

Abstract

Some of the most well-known arguments against epistemic externalism come in the form of thought experiments involving subjects who acquire beliefs through anomolous means such as clairvoyance. These thought experiments purport to provide counterexamples to the reliabilist conception of justification: their subjects are intuitively epistemically unjustified, yet meet reliabilist externalist criteria for justification. In this article, I address a recent defence of externalism due to Daniel Breyer, who argues that externalists need not consider such subjects justified, since they fail to own those beliefs in a way required for epistemic evaluability. I argue that the concept of belief ownership Breyer adopts leaves his account open to related counterexamples, and suggest a modification, drawing on analogies between these cases and cases of delusions, such as thought insertion. I will argue that a concept of authorship developed in the literature on delusions better grounds the sense of attribution required for epistemic evaluability.

Details

ISSN :
18746349 and 03535150
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta Analytica
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........72cdb9387fc18acde2bad6931e834b6f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12136-012-0170-4