Starting with its tenth (2000) volume, Philosophical Issues will be a yearly one-volume supplement to Noûs. Each year it will be devoted to invited papers and book symposia in a specific area of philosophy. The yearly has attained distinction through the uniformly high quality of its previous nine volumes and the fact that its authors include many of the most distinguished philosophers active today. The topic of Volume 10 is controversies at the interface of epistemology with philosophy of language and philosophy of mind, including discussion of the sorites paradox and linguistic contextualism on attributions of knowledge.…mehr
Starting with its tenth (2000) volume, Philosophical Issues will be a yearly one-volume supplement to Noûs. Each year it will be devoted to invited papers and book symposia in a specific area of philosophy. The yearly has attained distinction through the uniformly high quality of its previous nine volumes and the fact that its authors include many of the most distinguished philosophers active today. The topic of Volume 10 is controversies at the interface of epistemology with philosophy of language and philosophy of mind, including discussion of the sorites paradox and linguistic contextualism on attributions of knowledge.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Ernest Sosa is a Professor of Philosophy at Brown University and Rutgers University. He is author of Knowledge in Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 1991) and of papers in metaphysics and epistemology. Enrique Villanueva is a Research Fellow at the Instituto de Investigaciones Juridicas, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. He is author of papers and books in philosophy of mind and history of philosophy, and editor of Philosophical Issues from 1992 to 2000.
Inhaltsangabe
1 Skepticism and Contextualism. (Ernest Sosa).
2 Skepticism, Tracking, and Warrant. (James E. Tomberlin).
3 The Contextualist Evasion of Epistemology. (HilaryKornblith).
4 Sensitivity, Indiscernibility And Knowledge. (KeithLeher).
5 Replies. (Ernest Sosa).
6 Contextualism and Externalism: Trading in One Form ofSkepticism for Another.
(Robert J. Fogelin).
7 Scrutinizing a Trade. (Jay F. Rosenberg).
8 What Has Contexualism to Do with Skepticism? (EnriqueVillanueva).
9 What Has Contexualism and Levels of Scrutiny. (Luis M. Valdes-Villanueva).
10 Is Contextualism Stable ? (Micheal J. Williams).
11 Replies. (Robert J. Fogelin).
12 Contextualism and Skipticism. (Stewart Cohen).
13 Contextualism and the Real Nature of Academic Skipticism.(Peter D. Klein).
14 Reply to Cohen. (John Hawthorne).
15 Scepticism, Contextualism and Closure. (Josep L. Prades).
16 Replies. (Stewart Cohen).
17 Cogency and Question-Begging: Some Reflections onMcKinsey's Paradox.
and Putnam's Proof. (Crispin Wright).
18 On Wright 's Diagnosis of McKinsey's Argument.(Alfonso Garcia Suarez).
19 Transmission and Closure. (Bob Hale).
20 Warrant-Transmission, Defeaters and Disquotations. (R.M.Sainsbury).
21 Replies. (Crispin Wright).
22 Vagueness and Partial Belief. (Stephen Schiffer).
23 Vagueness and Indirect Disclosure. (Manuel Garcia-Carpintero).
24 Stephen Schiffer's Theory of Vagueness. (PaulHorwich).
25 Vagueness as a Psychological Notion. (Lourdes Valdivia).
26 Partial Belief and Borderline Cases. (Jorges RodriguezMarqueze).
27 Vagueness- Related Attitudes. (David Barett).
28 Replies. (Stephen Schiffer).
29 Scepticism and the Principle of Inferential Justification.(John Greco).
30 Scepticism and Epistemic Kinds. (John Greco).
31 The Principle of Inferential Justification,Scepticism andCausal Beliefs.
(Josep E. Corbi).
32 Memory and Justification: Hookway and Fumerton on Scepticism.(Carlos J. Moya and Tobies Grimaltos.