The Reliability of Sense Perception

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Cornell University Press, 1993 - 148 páginas

Why suppose that sense perception is an accurate source of information about the physical environment? More generally, is it possible to demonstrate that our basic ways of forming beliefs are reliable? In this book, a leading analytic philosopher confronts this classic problem through detailed investigation of sense perception, the source of beliefs in which we place the most confidence. Carefully assessing the available arguments, William P. Alston concludes that it is not possible to show in any noncircular way that sense perception is a reliable source of beliefs.

Alston thoroughly examines the main arguments that have been advanced for the reliability of sense perception, including arguments from the various kinds of success we achieve by relying on the sense perception, arguments that some features of our sense experience are best explained by supposing that it is an accurate guide, and arguments that there is something conceptually incoherent about the idea that sense perception is not reliable. He concludes that all of these arguments that are not disqualified in other ways are epistemically circular, for they use premises based upon the very source in question. Alston then suggest that the most appropriate response to the impossibility of showing that our basic sources of beliefs are reliable is an appeal to the practical rationality of engaging in certain socially established belief-forming practices.

The Reliability of Sense Perception will be welcome by epistemologists, cognitive scientists, and philosophers of science.

 

Contenido

Track Record and Other Simple Empirical
12
A Priori Arguments
26
Paradigm Case Arguments
45
The Private Language Argument
53
Transcendental Arguments
57
Empirical Arguments for the Reliability of SP i The Explanation of Sensory Experience
60
The Explanation of Patterns in Sense Experience
70
Attempts to Support the Standard Explanation
78
How Widespread Is the Circularity Problem?
115
Where Do We Go from Here? i The Problem
120
A Practical Argument for the Rationality of SP
124
Practical Rationality and Reliability
130
Overriders of Prima Facie Rationality
134
Significant SelfSupport
138
Bibliography
141
Index
145

Explanations of Our Success in Predicting Our Experience
97
Problems with the Argument
101

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Acerca del autor (1993)

The late William P. Alston was Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Syracuse University. His books include A Realist Conception of Truth, Illocutionary Acts and Sentence Meanings, The Reliability of Sense Perception, and Perceiving God: The Epistemology of Religious Experience, all from Cornell.

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