Tag Archives: anti-intellectualism

NAVIGATING THE BOUNDARIES OF KNOW-HOW AND ACTION (pages 405-423)

Xuanzi FANG ABSTRACT: In recent philosophical exploration, a study delves into the essence of knowledge and intentional action, examining know-how and its connection to success. Carlotta Pavese’s “Know-How, Action, and Luck” (2018) reevaluates know-how, asserting its similarities with know-that. Pavese introduces a novel perspective by exploring the value of know-how and intentional action. Emphasizing the role of knowledge in explaining …

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GROUP KNOW-HOW: A REPLY TO PALERMOS AND TOLLEFSEN (pages 229-242)

Xuanzi FANG ABSTRACT: In recent work, Palermos and Tollefsen develop a novel account of group know-how (GKH)—know-how applicable to a group as a whole—and which they take to be superior to envisioned accounts of group know-how that reduce the group know-how to that of individuals. While their argument has promise, I aim to show that it succumbs to several objections, …

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PRAGMATIC ENCROACHMENT AND CONTEXT EXTERNALISM (pages 165-174)

David COSS ABSTRACT: Pragmatic Encroachment (PE hereafter), sometimes called ‘anti-intellectualism,’ is a denial of epistemic purism. Purism is the view that only traditional, truth-relevant, epistemic factors determine whether a true belief is an instance of knowledge. According to anti-intellectualists, two subjects S and S*, could be in the same epistemic position with regards to puristic epistemic factors, but S might …

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