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Single Idea 6873

[filed under theme 13. Knowledge Criteria / B. Internal Justification / 5. Coherentism / c. Coherentism critique ]

Full Idea

The problem of Concurrent Retrieval is a problem for internalism, notably coherentism, because an agent could ascertain coherence of her entire corpus only by concurrently retrieving all of her stored beliefs.

Clarification

Her 'corpus' is the body of all her beliefs

Gist of Idea

Coherent justification seems to require retrieving all our beliefs simultaneously

Source

Alvin I. Goldman (Internalism Exposed [1999], §3)

Book Ref

Goldman,Alvin I.: 'Pathways to Knowledge' [OUP 2002], p.11


A Reaction

Sounds neat, but not very convincing. Goldman is relying on scepticism about short-term memory, but all belief and knowledge will collapse if we go down that road. We couldn't do simple arithmetic if Goldman's point were right.


The 16 ideas from Alvin I. Goldman

Gestalt psychology proposes inbuilt proximity, similarity, smoothness and closure principles [Goldman]
Infant brains appear to have inbuilt ontological categories [Goldman]
The way in which colour experiences are evoked is physically odd and unpredictable [Goldman]
Rat behaviour reveals a considerable ability to count [Goldman]
Children may have three innate principles which enable them to learn to count [Goldman]
Elephants can be correctly identified from as few as three primitive shapes [Goldman]
If the only aim was consistent beliefs then new evidence and experiments would be irrelevant [Goldman]
We can't only believe things if we are currently conscious of their justification - there are too many [Goldman]
Internalism must cover Forgotten Evidence, which is no longer retrievable from memory [Goldman]
Coherent justification seems to require retrieving all our beliefs simultaneously [Goldman]
Internal justification needs both mental stability and time to compute coherence [Goldman]
Reliability involves truth, and truth is external [Goldman]
Introspection is really retrospection; my pain is justified by a brief causal history [Goldman]
Justification depends on the reliability of its cause, where reliable processes tend to produce truth [Goldman]
A belief can be justified when the person has forgotten the evidence for it [Goldman]
If justified beliefs are well-formed beliefs, then animals and young children have them [Goldman]