Talk:Reliabilism: Difference between revisions
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Plantinga at least, would resist your assertion that reliabilism can be understood as just a further analysis of what justificaiton means. His book "Warrant the Current Debate" clearly possitions his views as a radical departure from the classical view of justification. In fact, he intentionally refuses to use the word justification in describing his own theory of knowlege.[[user:Mark Christensen|Mark Christensen]] |
Plantinga at least, would resist your assertion that reliabilism can be understood as just a further analysis of what justificaiton means. His book "Warrant the Current Debate" clearly possitions his views as a radical departure from the classical view of justification. In fact, he intentionally refuses to use the word justification in describing his own theory of knowlege.[[user:Mark Christensen|Mark Christensen]] |
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It's been a while since I've read that book, but I disagree that it offers a radical departure from the classical view of justification. He says, as most epistemologists do, that justification is a deontological concept (as I say in Ch. 1, Sect. 1 of my dissertation), and says that warrant, allegedly not a deontological concept, is a more interesting concept to analyze--that's how I remember it. In fact, I believe it's of the concept of warrant that Plantinga gives his account, not either of knowledge or of justification. Besides, on any account Plantinga would certainly ''not'' deny that reliabilism ''can'' be understood as an analysis of what justification means; any epistemologist knows ''that.'' --[[user:Larry_Sanger|Larry_Sanger]] |
Revision as of 07:51, 14 February 2002
I appreciate the work that went into the earlier drafts of this article, but basically, they were obviously written by someone who lacks the philosophical sophistication to do this topic justice. It would have been OK if I had to rearrange a little here and there, change a few words, add a few qualifiers. In fact, I had to completely rewrite the thing--nary a sentence was left standing in its original form. Maybe I'm a little sensitive since Swain was on my dissertation committee, but jeez.
Basically, I think we should write articles about what we know enough about to be able to do an acceptable job, where "acceptable job" means "a job such that an expert on the topic would not have to completely rewrite the article from the beginning and change every sentence in it." Unless we have this attitude when we work on the 'pedia, it's going to get filled up with a lot of really bad cruft. --Larry_Sanger
Plantinga at least, would resist your assertion that reliabilism can be understood as just a further analysis of what justificaiton means. His book "Warrant the Current Debate" clearly possitions his views as a radical departure from the classical view of justification. In fact, he intentionally refuses to use the word justification in describing his own theory of knowlege.Mark Christensen
It's been a while since I've read that book, but I disagree that it offers a radical departure from the classical view of justification. He says, as most epistemologists do, that justification is a deontological concept (as I say in Ch. 1, Sect. 1 of my dissertation), and says that warrant, allegedly not a deontological concept, is a more interesting concept to analyze--that's how I remember it. In fact, I believe it's of the concept of warrant that Plantinga gives his account, not either of knowledge or of justification. Besides, on any account Plantinga would certainly not deny that reliabilism can be understood as an analysis of what justification means; any epistemologist knows that. --Larry_Sanger