This Is Epistemology. J. Adam Carter

This Is Epistemology - J. Adam Carter


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The Regress Argument is not, it should be noted, the only viable rationale for foundationalism. A second rationale is a kind of argument from cases.34 When you think about beliefs about how you feel right now (tired? sad?), what you're trying to do or what you're doing (reading? tapping your feet?), what you're thinking about or imagining (epistemology?), or what the sum of two small numbers is, it is very difficult to imagine what propositions you'd have to rely on to justifiably form a belief about these matters. If you're typing (or trying to type), it seems you can know that that's what you're up to “straight off,” in the sense that you form these beliefs, seemingly unimpeachably, without first explicitly considering other things. What evidence would you appeal to in order to justify your belief that you are trying to type?

3 8 7 9 2 5 1
6 9 4 1 7
2 4
4 1 6
9 1 8 7
2 8 1
7 3 1
7 1 2 9
4 3 6 9 8 7

      1.72 The foundationalist thinks that something similar is true when it comes to the justification of any belief. Without non‐inferentially justified beliefs (i.e. givens, or freebies, if you like), you couldn't rely on reasoning to provide you with any justified beliefs. The rational support for any justified belief has to trace back to the support provided to a non‐inferentially justified belief. (In the limiting case, that belief will itself be one of the non‐inferentially justified beliefs.) Happily, the foundationalist says, we do have some non‐inferentially justified beliefs. They are justified even if we cannot find support for them in other justified beliefs we have, and they are the foundation that accounts for all the derivatively justified beliefs we form by reasoning well from these starting points.

      1.73 It might be useful to think about how far we can push this analogy, because it will help us see why many philosophers have been critical of foundationalism, and help us see how foundationalists should respond to this criticism in fleshing out their view.

      1.74 Thus far, foundationalism – as we've stated it – is a purely structural proposal. It says that (i) every chain of justified beliefs must include at least some non‐inferentially justified belief and (ii) every inferentially justified belief must derive its justification from non‐inferentially justified beliefs. If this view is correct, nothing gets into Your Book of Justified Beliefs unless it derives its justification from another justified belief via inference or is non‐inferentially justified and derives its justification from something other than another belief. We haven't yet said anything substantive about the nature of these non‐inferentially justified beliefs, because we haven't said what these beliefs are about, what supports them, or how what supports them ensures that they have the right properties to be justified.


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