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Single Idea 19684
[filed under theme 13. Knowledge Criteria / B. Internal Justification / 3. Evidentialism / a. Evidence
]
Full Idea
Does the sudden realization of a heretofore unrecognized possibility count as evidence?
Gist of Idea
Does spotting a new possibility count as evidence?
Source
Timothy McGrew (Evidence [2011], 'Evid..')
Book Ref
'Routledge Companion to Epistemology', ed/tr. Bernecker,S/Pritchard,D [Routledge 2014], p.62
A Reaction
[Nice use of 'heretofore'! Why say 'previously' when you can keep these wonderful old English words alive?] This means that we can imagine new evidence ('maybe the murderer was a snake'!). Wrong. The evidence is what suggests the possibility.
The
17 ideas
with the same theme
[experiences and facts pointing towards knowledge]:
23641
|
People dislike believing without evidence, and try to avoid it
[Reid]
|
19224
|
Scientists will give up any conclusion, if experience opposes it
[Peirce]
|
17073
|
I simply reject evidence, if it is totally contrary to my web of belief
[Smart]
|
3097
|
We don't distinguish between accepting, and accepting as evidence
[Harman]
|
7450
|
In the medieval view, only deduction counted as true evidence
[Hacking]
|
7451
|
Formerly evidence came from people; the new idea was that things provided evidence
[Hacking]
|
16825
|
How do we distinguish negative from irrelevant evidence, if both match the hypothesis?
[Lipton]
|
19687
|
Absence of evidence proves nothing, and weird claims need special evidence
[McGrew]
|
19684
|
Does spotting a new possibility count as evidence?
[McGrew]
|
19688
|
Every event is highly unlikely (in detail), but may be perfectly plausible
[McGrew]
|
19686
|
Criminal law needs two separate witnesses, but historians will accept one witness
[McGrew]
|
19680
|
Maybe all evidence consists of beliefs, rather than of facts
[McGrew]
|
19681
|
If all evidence is propositional, what is the evidence for the proposition? Do we face a regress?
[McGrew]
|
19689
|
Several unreliable witnesses can give good support, if they all say the same thing
[McGrew]
|
17770
|
Clifford's dictum seems to block our beliefs in morality, politics and philosophy
[Bayne]
|
17771
|
How we evaluate evidence depends on our background beliefs
[Bayne]
|
18820
|
In English 'evidence' is a mass term, qualified by 'little' and 'more'
[Rumfitt]
|