How Can Beliefs Wrong? —A Strawsonian Epistemology

Berislav Marusic, Stephen K. White
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引用次数: 38

Abstract

ABSTRACT:We take a tremendous interest in how other people think of us. We have certain expectations of others, concerning how we are to figure in their thought and judgment. And we often feel wronged if those are disappointed. But it is puzzling how others’ beliefs could wrong us. On the one hand, moral considerations don’t bear on the truth of a belief and so seem to be the wrong kind of reasons for belief. On the other hand, truth-directed considerations seem to render moral considerations redundant. In this paper, we argue that to understand the possibility of doxastic wronging, we need to understand beliefs, no less than actions, as ways of relating to one another. In particular, how we take account of what others think and say will depend on whether we take up what P. F. Strawson calls the participant stance toward them. We show how this helps to make sense of an example Miranda Fricker identifies as a case of epistemic injustice. We then use the example to spell out the ethical significance of Tyler Burge’s idea that we have a default entitlement to accept at face value what we receive from a rational source.
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信念怎么会错?——斯特劳森认识论
摘要:我们对别人如何看待自己非常感兴趣。我们对别人有一定的期望,关于我们如何在他们的思想和判断中发挥作用。如果他们失望了,我们常常会感到委屈。但令人费解的是,别人的信念怎么会误导我们。一方面,道德考虑与信仰的真实性无关,因此似乎是一种错误的信仰理由。另一方面,以真理为导向的考虑似乎使道德考虑变得多余。在这篇论文中,我们认为,要理解对立错误的可能性,我们需要理解信仰,就像理解行为一样,是一种相互联系的方式。特别是,我们如何考虑别人的想法和言论将取决于我们是否采取P. F.斯特劳森所说的参与者对他们的立场。我们展示了这如何有助于理解米兰达·弗里克(Miranda Fricker)认定的一个认知不公正的例子。然后,我们用这个例子来阐述泰勒·伯奇的观点的伦理意义,即我们有默认的权利接受我们从理性来源获得的东西的表面价值。
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