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40Recognitional Abilities and Knowing What One SeesIn Johannes Roessler, Andrea Giananti & Gianfranco Soldati (eds.), Perceptual Knowledge and Self-Awareness, Oxford University Press. 2024.Perceptual-recognitional abilities are abilities to recognize things that are some way as being that way from the way they appear to some sense-modality. These abilities have a key role in accounting for perceptual knowledge. Under the conception adopted, general abilities are exercised only in doing the thing that the ability is an ability to do. Accordingly, recognitional abilities are exercised only in recognizing a thing as being some way, and in that way coming to know that it is that way. …Read more
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17Perceptual Knowledge and Background BeliefsIn Dylan Dodd & Elia Zardini (eds.), Scepticism and Perceptual Justification, Oxford University Press. pp. 128-148. 2013.It is plausible that some perceptual knowledge has rich content—content that goes beyond the superficial appearance of the objects perceived. This poses a problem: how can the way something appears reveal to us that it is of some rich kind, for instance a telephone, given the possibility that something could appear in the same way and not be of that kind? Objections are raised to accounts that treat such perceptual knowledge as covertly inferential. A theory of perceptual-recognitional abilities…Read more
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17Abilities, Competences, and FallibilityIn Miguel Ángel Fernández Vargas (ed.), Performance Epistemology: Foundations and Applications, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 62-82. 2016.Perceptual knowledge is the outcome of the exercise of perceptual-recognitional abilities. An account of those abilities is set in the context of an account of abilities in general. A success thesis is expounded according to which an ability is exercised only if the agent does what the ability is an ability to do. There is discussion of the connection between having an ability and being reliably successful. It is argued that hard performances (e.g. throwing a dart into the bullseye) present no o…Read more
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8The Social Transmission of KnowledgeIn Duncan Pritchard (ed.), The nature and value of knowledge: three investigations, Oxford University Press. pp. 164-188. 2010.This chapter argues that the goal of enquiry is reflective knowledge. Reflective knowledge is knowledge along with knowledge of how we know, or at least knowledge that we know. Recently discussed puzzlement about the value of knowledge is circumvented. The social transmission of knowledge is explored via a discussion of straightforward cases of testimony. An account of those cases is developed, drawing on the account of knowledge from indicators in the previous chapter but also invoking the idea…Read more
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4Knowledge from IndicatorsIn Duncan Pritchard (ed.), The nature and value of knowledge: three investigations, Oxford University Press. pp. 144-163. 2010.This chapter develops an account of clinching evidence in relation to knowledge from indicators, such as knowing that it has rained recently from the wetness of outdoor surfaces. A standard way of understanding such cases, in terms of reliance on a covering generalization, is resisted. An alternative view is presented in terms of abilities to recognize the significance of the indicator phenomenon in question. These abilities are found to be closely analogous to perceptual-recognitional abilities…Read more
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8Perceptual Knowledge and Recognitional AbilitiesIn Duncan Pritchard (ed.), The nature and value of knowledge: three investigations, Oxford University Press. pp. 120-143. 2010.This chapter gives an account of perceptual knowledge in which perceptual-recognitional abilities are central. These abilities are nothing less than knowledge-acquisition abilities. They include abilities to tell of certain things from their appearances to some sensory modality that they are of some kind or have some property. Emphasis is placed on the following ideas: that perceptual-recognitional abilities are abilities with respect to favourable environments — ones in which the things in ques…Read more
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3Knowledge in Recent Epistemology: Some ProblemsIn Duncan Pritchard (ed.), The nature and value of knowledge: three investigations, Oxford University Press. pp. 97-119. 2010.This chapter argues that there is a tension — the central tension — between the assumption that _knowledge_ admits of reductive conceptual analysis along traditional lines and the roles that knowledge and thinking about knowledge plays in our lives. While an analysis of knowledge should reflect the logical role of the concept, the prospects for providing a reductive analysis that meets this desideratum are dim. The chapter explores two further clusters of problems for the traditional ways of the…Read more
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2Knowing from Being ToldIn Duncan Pritchard, Alan Millar & Adrian Haddock (eds.), Social Epistemology, Oxford University Press. pp. 175-193. 2008.This chapter's discussion focuses on the transmission of knowledge through testimony in straightforward cases. These are cases in which subjects gain knowledge from the say so of a speaker without in any obvious way engaging in reasoning over the trustworthiness of the speaker. The account here accords a central role to the practice of informing through telling, but while practice-theoretic considerations explain how it is that people who rely on testimony will so often acquire true beliefs, the…Read more
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Knowing From Being ToldIn Duncan Pritchard, Alan Millar & Adrian Haddock (eds.), Social Epistemology, Oxford University Press. 2008.
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The Nature and Value of Language: Three InvestigationsOxford University Press UK. 2013.This volume comprises three distinct investigations into the relationship between the nature and the value of knowledge. Each is written by one of the authors in consultation with the other two. 'Knowledge and Understanding' (by Duncan Pritchard) critically examines virtue-theoretic responses to the problem of the value of knowledge, and argues that the finally valuable cognitive state is not knowledge but understanding. 'Knowledge and Recognition' (by Alan Millar) develops an account of knowled…Read more
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Perceptual-recognitional abilities and perceptual knowledgeIn Adrian Haddock & Fiona Macpherson (eds.), Disjunctivism: Perception, Action, Knowledge, Oxford University Press. 2011.
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54Review of Markus Patrick Hess, Is Truth the Primary Epistemic Goal? (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (6). 2010.
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55Rationality and Higher-Order IntentionalityRoyal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 49 179-198. 2001.According tothe rationality thesis, the possession of propositional attitudes is inextricably tied to rationality. How in this context should we conceive of rationality? In one sense, being rational is contrasted with being non-rational, as when human beings are described as rational animals. In another sense, being rational is contrasted with being irrational. I shall call rationality in this latter senseevaluative rationality. Whatever else it might involve, evaluative rationality surely has t…Read more
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71Reviews truth, thought, reason: Essays on Frege by Tyler Burge clarendon press, oxford, 2005, pp. 419 + XII (review)Philosophy 83 (2): 275-279. 2008.
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Reasons for Action and Instrumental RationalityIn José Luis Bermúdez & Alan Millar (eds.), Reason and Nature: Essays in the Theory of Rationality, Clarendon Press. 2002.
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Philosophical Finesse: Studies in the Art of Rational PersuasionPhilosophical Books 31 (4): 218-220. 2009.
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33Where's the Use in Meaning?Dialectica 39 (1): 35-52. 1985.The article presents an analysis of Quine's critique of mentalism in semantics. Quine is right to demand that theories of meaning show how the meanings of linguistic expressions are grounded in verbal dispositions. His own account of verbal dispositions is inadequate to the task. It is argued that the dispositions in which meanings are grounded (i) are dispositions to accept and reject sentences, (ii) essentially involve beliefs, (iii) link sentences with one another, as well as with experience,…Read more