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Diversity Reading List

Helping you include authors from under-represented groups in your teaching

Thought experiments rethought – and reperceived

Posted on May 17, 2018December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Contemplating imaginary scenarios that evoke certain sorts of quasi?sensory intuitions may bring us to new beliefs about contingent features of the natural world. These beliefs may be produced quasi?observationally; the presence of a mental image may play a crucial cognitive role in the formation of the belief in question. And this albeit fallible quasi?observational belief?forming mechanism may, in certain contexts, be sufficiently reliable to count as a source of justification. This sheds light on the central puzzle surrounding scientific thought experiment, which is how contemplation of an imaginary scenario can lead to new knowledge about contingent features of the natural world.

Posted in Mental States and Processes, Physical Sciences, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged empiricism, learning from imagination, thought experimentsLeave a comment

Philosophical thought experiments, intuitions, and cognitive equilibrium

Posted on May 23, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Summary: Drawing on literature from the dual-processing tradition in psychology, this paper tries to explain why contemplation of an imaginary particular may have cognitive and motivational effects that differ from those evoked by an abstract description of the same content, and hence, why thought experiments may be effective devices for conceptual reconfiguration. It suggests that by presenting content in a suitably concrete way, thought experiments recruit representational schemas that were otherwise inactive, thereby evoking responses that may run counter to those evoked by alternative presentations of relevantly similar content.

Posted in Mental States and Processes, Philosophical Media and Methodology, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged cognitive mechanism, conceptual reconfiguration, dual processing, imagination, intuition, reflective equilibrium, thought experimentLeave a comment

Experimental Philosophy, Contextualism and SSI

Posted on May 23, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: I will ask the conditional question: if folk attributions of “know” are not sensitive to the stakes and/or the salience of error, does this cast doubt on contextualism or subject-sensitive invariantism (SSI)? I argue that if it should turn out that folk attributions of knowledge are insensitive to such factors, then this undermines contextualism, but not SSI. That is not to say that SSI is invulnerable to empirical work of any kind. Rather, I defend the more modest claim that leading versions of SSI are not undermined by one particular kind of experimental result, namely the recent suggestion that knowledge attributions are insensitive to the stakes.

Posted in Mental States and Processes, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged contextualism, experimental philosophy, subject sensitive invariantismLeave a comment

Intuitions and Experiments: A Defense of the Case Method in Epistemology

Posted on May 23, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Many epistemologists use intuitive responses to particular cases as evidence for their theories. Recently, experimental philosophers have challenged the evidential value of intuitions, suggesting that our responses to particular cases are unstable, inconsistent with the responses of the untrained, and swayed by factors such as ethnicity and gender. This paper presents evidence that neither gender nor ethnicity influence epistemic intuitions, and that the standard responses to Gettier cases and the like are widely shared. It argues that epistemic intuitions are produced by the natural ‘mindreading’ capacity that underpins ordinary attributions of belief and knowledge in everyday social interaction. Although this capacity is fallible, its weaknesses are similar to the weaknesses of natural capacities such as sensory perception. Experimentalists who do not wish to be skeptical about ordinary empirical methods have no good reason to be skeptical about epistemic intuitions.

Posted in Mental States and Processes, Philosophical Media and Methodology, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged epistemology, experimental philosophy, Gettier, intuition, methodologyLeave a comment

Formal Languages in Logic: A Philosophical and Cognitive Analysis

Posted on May 23, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Formal languages are widely regarded as being above all mathematical objects and as producing a greater level of precision and technical complexity in logical investigations because of this. Yet defining formal languages exclusively in this way offers only a partial and limited explanation of the impact which their use (and the uses of formalisms more generally elsewhere) actually has. In this book, Catarina Dutilh Novaes adopts a much wider conception of formal languages so as to investigate more broadly what exactly is going on when theorists put these tools to use. She looks at the history and philosophy of formal languages and focuses on the cognitive impact of formal languages on human reasoning, drawing on their historical development, psychology, cognitive science and philosophy. Her wide-ranging study will be valuable for both students and researchers in philosophy, logic, psychology and cognitive and computer science.

Posted in Grammar and Meaning, Logic and MathematicsTagged formal language, logic, reasoningLeave a comment

On intuitional stability: The clear, the strong and the paradigmatic

Posted on May 20, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Skepticism about the epistemic value of intuition in theoretical and philosophical inquiry has recently been bolstered by empirical research suggesting that people’s concrete-case intuitions are vulnerable to irrational biases (e.g., the order effect). What is more, skeptics argue that we have no way to “calibrate” our intuitions against these biases and no way of anticipating intuitional instability. This paper challenges the skeptical position, introducing data from two studies that suggest not only that people’s concrete-case intuitions are often stable, but also that people have introspective awareness of this stability, providing a promising means by which to assess the epistemic value of our intuitions.

Posted in Mental States and Processes, Philosophical Media and Methodology, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged cognitive bias, experimental philosophy, intuition, intuitional stability, order effectLeave a comment

Philosophical expertise and scientific expertise

Posted on May 20, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: The “expertise defense” is the claim that philosophers have special expertise that allows them to resist the biases suggested by the findings of experimental philosophers. Typically, this defense is backed up by an analogy with expertise in science or other academic fields. Recently, however, studies have begun to suggest that philosophers’ intuitions may be just as subject to inappropriate variation as those of the folk. Should we conclude that the expertise defense has been debunked? In this paper, the author argues that the analogy with science still motivates a default assumption of philosophical expertise; however, the expertise so motivated is not expertise in intuition, and its existence would not suffice to answer the experimentalist challenge. She suggests that there are deep parallels between the current methodological crisis in philosophy and the decline of introspection-based methods in psychology in the early twentieth century. The comparison can give us insight into the possible future evolution of philosophical methodology.

Posted in Mental States and Processes, Philosophical Media and Methodology, Social Epistemology, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged experimental philosophy, expertise defense, intuitionLeave a comment

Causation, Free Will, and Naturalism

Posted on May 19, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This chapter addresses the worry that the existence of causal antecedents to your choices means that you are causally compelled to act as you do. It begins with the folk notion of cause, leads the reader through recent developments in the scientific understanding of causal concepts, and argues that those developments undermine the threat from causal antecedents. The discussion is then used as a model for a kind of naturalistic metaphysics that takes its lead from science, letting everyday concepts be shaped and transformed by scientific developments.

Posted in Causation, Free Will, Ontology and MetaontologyTagged causation, free will, metaphysics, naturalism, philosophy of scienceLeave a comment

The American Pragmatists (The Oxford History of Philosophy)

Posted on May 19, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: Cheryl Misak presents a history of the great American philosophical tradition of pragmatism, from its inception in the Metaphysical Club of the 1870s to the present day. She identifies two dominant lines of thought in the tradition: the first begins with Charles S. Peirce and Chauncey Wright and continues through to Lewis, Quine, and Sellars; the other begins with William James and continues through to Dewey and Rorty. This ambitious new account identifies the connections between traditional American pragmatism and twentieth-century Anglo-American philosophy, and links pragmatism to major positions in the recent history of philosophy, such as logical empiricism. Misak argues that the most defensible version of pragmatism must be seen and recovered as an important part of the analytic tradition.

Posted in Applied Epistemology, Forms of Government, Historiography of Philosophy, Philosophical Media and Methodology, Political Authority and Legitimacy, Political Ideologies, Social Epistemology, The Nature, Value, and Aims of Philosophy, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged history of philosophy, pragmatismLeave a comment

Exploratory Experiments

Posted on May 16, 2016December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Philosophers of experiment have acknowledged that experiments are often more than mere hypothesis-tests, once thought to be an experiment’s exclusive calling. Drawing on examples from contemporary biology, I make an additional amendment to our understanding of experiment by examining the way that `wide’ instrumentation can, for reasons of efficiency, lead scientists away from traditional hypothesis-directed methods of experimentation and towards exploratory methods.

Posted in Life Sciences, Physical SciencesTagged biology, experiment, science, scientific practiceLeave a comment

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