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2 ideas
8793 | If observation is knowledge, it is not just an experience; it is a justification in the space of reasons [Sellars] |
Full Idea: In characterizing an observational episode or state as 'knowing', we are not giving an empirical description of it; we are placing it in the logical space of reasons, of justifying and being able to justify what one says. | |
From: Wilfrid Sellars (Does Emp.Knowledge have Foundation? [1956], p.123) | |
A reaction: McDowell has made the Kantian phrase 'the logical space of reasons' very popular. This is a very nice statement of the internalist view of justification, with which I sympathise more and more. It is a rationalist coherentist view. It needn't be mystical! |
8792 | Observations like 'this is green' presuppose truths about what is a reliable symptom of what [Sellars] |
Full Idea: Observational knowledge of any particular fact, e.g. that this is green, presupposes that one knows general facts of the form 'X is a reliable symptom of Y'. | |
From: Wilfrid Sellars (Does Emp.Knowledge have Foundation? [1956], p.123) | |
A reaction: This is a nicely observed version of the regress problem with justification. I would guess that foundationalists would simply deny that this further knowledge is required; 'this is green' arises out of the experience, but it is not an inference. |