In its non-epistemological usage, testimony generally refers to formal legal statements. In epistemology, however, testimony is commonly treated as the act of one person telling something to another. Unlike other sources of knowledge, such as perception, reasoning, introspection, and memory, testimony is inherently intersubjective, requiring the existence of the Other. This intersubjective nature, however, does not receive sufficient attention by prevalent approaches. This paper proposes a novel…
Read moreIn its non-epistemological usage, testimony generally refers to formal legal statements. In epistemology, however, testimony is commonly treated as the act of one person telling something to another. Unlike other sources of knowledge, such as perception, reasoning, introspection, and memory, testimony is inherently intersubjective, requiring the existence of the Other. This intersubjective nature, however, does not receive sufficient attention by prevalent approaches. This paper proposes a novel Epistemic Role View (ERV) of testimony, grounded in Alfred Schütz’s phenomenological sociology and Harold Garfinkel’s ethnomethodology as theoretical foundations, while remaining methodologically within analytic epistemology. ERV argues that because the Other is a constitutive aspect of testimony, analytic epistemology alone cannot fully capture its structure. Thus, ERV holds that testimony should serve as a point of convergence between analytic epistemology, phenomenological sociology, and ethnomethodology, offering a more comprehensive account than views that neglect the socially shared common sense that structures everyday interactions.