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Single Idea 8816

[filed under theme 13. Knowledge Criteria / C. External Justification / 1. External Justification ]

Full Idea

Externalists tend to take a third-person point of view in discussing epistemology.

Gist of Idea

Externalists tend to take a third-person point of view of epistemology

Source

John L. Pollock (Epistemic Norms [1986], 'Ref.of Extern')

Book Ref

'Epistemology - An Anthology', ed/tr. Sosa,E. /Kim,J. [Blackwell 2000], p.199


A Reaction

Pollock's point, quite reasonably, is that the first-person aspect must precede any objective assessment of whether someone knows. External facts, such as unpublicised information, can undermine high quality internal justification.


The 12 ideas from John L. Pollock

Rules of reasoning precede the concept of truth, and they are what characterize it [Pollock]
We need the concept of truth for defeasible reasoning [Pollock]
Defeasible reasoning requires us to be able to think about our thoughts [Pollock]
Reasons are always for beliefs, but a perceptual state is a reason without itself being a belief [Pollock]
What we want to know is - when is it all right to believe something? [Pollock]
Norm Externalism says norms must be internal, but their selection is partly external [Pollock]
Epistemic norms are internalised procedural rules for reasoning [Pollock]
If we have to appeal explicitly to epistemic norms, that will produce an infinite regress [Pollock]
Statements about necessities need not be necessarily true [Pollock]
Logical entailments are not always reasons for beliefs, because they may be irrelevant [Pollock]
Externalists tend to take a third-person point of view of epistemology [Pollock]
Belief externalism is false, because external considerations cannot be internalized for actual use [Pollock]