We often talk about groups believing, knowing, and testifying. Epistemic claims of this sort are of significant consequence, given that they bear on the moral and legal responsibilities of collective entities. A team of leading experts in the field present new, cutting edge theories, insights, and approaches in collective epistemology.
We often talk about groups believing, knowing, and testifying. Epistemic claims of this sort are of significant consequence, given that they bear on the moral and legal responsibilities of collective entities. A team of leading experts in the field present new, cutting edge theories, insights, and approaches in collective epistemology.
Jennifer Lackey is Professor of Philosophy at Northwestern University. Her recent research focuses on the epistemology of groups, the epistemology of testimony, norms of assertion, and the epistemic significance of disagreement. She has co-edited (with Ernest Sosa) The Epistemology of Testimony (OUP, 2006) and (with David Christensen) The Epistemology of Disagreement: New Essays (OUP, 2013) and is the author of Learning from Words: Testimony as a Source of Knowledge (OUP, 2008). She is the recipient of a Mellon Foundation Grant for a Sawyer Seminar (2014), the Charles A. Ryskamp Research Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies (2007), and a Summer Stipend from the National Endowment for the Humanities (2002). She is also winner of the Young Epistemologist Prize (2005).
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction * Part One: The Debate between Summativists and Non-Summativists * 1: Alvin I. Goldman: Social Process Reliabilism: Solving Justification Problems in Collective Epistemology * 2: Alexander Bird: When Is There a Group that Knows? Distributed Cognition, Scientific Knowledge, and the Social Epistemic Subject * 3: Jennifer Lackey: A Deflationary Account of Group Testimony * Part Two: General Epistemic Concepts in the Collective Domain * 4: Philip Pettit: How to Tell if a Group Is an Agent * 5: Sarah Wright: The Stoic Epistemic Virtues of Groups * 6: David Christensen: Disagreement and Public Controversy * Part Three: Individual and Collective Epistemology * 7: Ernest Sosa: Social Roots of Human Knowledge * 8: Margaret Gilbert and Daniel Pilchman: Belief, Acceptance, and What Happens in Groups: Some Methodological Considerations * Part Four: Collective Entities and Formal Epistemology * 9: Rachael Briggs, Fabrizio Cariani, Kenny Easwaran, and Branden Fitelson: Individual Coherence and Group Coherence * 10: Christian List: When to Defer to Supermajority Testimony--and When Not * Index
* Introduction * Part One: The Debate between Summativists and Non-Summativists * 1: Alvin I. Goldman: Social Process Reliabilism: Solving Justification Problems in Collective Epistemology * 2: Alexander Bird: When Is There a Group that Knows? Distributed Cognition, Scientific Knowledge, and the Social Epistemic Subject * 3: Jennifer Lackey: A Deflationary Account of Group Testimony * Part Two: General Epistemic Concepts in the Collective Domain * 4: Philip Pettit: How to Tell if a Group Is an Agent * 5: Sarah Wright: The Stoic Epistemic Virtues of Groups * 6: David Christensen: Disagreement and Public Controversy * Part Three: Individual and Collective Epistemology * 7: Ernest Sosa: Social Roots of Human Knowledge * 8: Margaret Gilbert and Daniel Pilchman: Belief, Acceptance, and What Happens in Groups: Some Methodological Considerations * Part Four: Collective Entities and Formal Epistemology * 9: Rachael Briggs, Fabrizio Cariani, Kenny Easwaran, and Branden Fitelson: Individual Coherence and Group Coherence * 10: Christian List: When to Defer to Supermajority Testimony--and When Not * Index
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