The nature of testimonial justification

It's generally agreed that testimony can be a source of knowledge and justified belief. The epistemology of testimony concerns itself with explaining how this can be the case. This thesis begins by identifying three types of explanation. According to the first explanation, my testimony can indu...

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Main Author: Wright, Stephen
Other Authors: Faulkner, Paul ; Fricker, Miranda ; Hopkins, Rob
Published: University of Sheffield 2014
Subjects:
100
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.631427
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6314272017-10-04T03:24:16ZThe nature of testimonial justificationWright, StephenFaulkner, Paul ; Fricker, Miranda ; Hopkins, Rob2014It's generally agreed that testimony can be a source of knowledge and justified belief. The epistemology of testimony concerns itself with explaining how this can be the case. This thesis begins by identifying three types of explanation. According to the first explanation, my testimony can induce a justified belief in you because you use the reasons that you have available to you to infer the truth of what I say from the fact that I said it. According to the second explanation, my testimony can induce a justified belief in you because the processes involved in you forming the belief on the basis of my testimony are suitably reliable. And according to the third explanation, my testimony can induce a justified belief in you because I have justification for what I say and my testimony allows you to form a belief that's supported by this justification. Having identified three different types of explanation, I argue that neither the first nor the second type of explanation can give a full account of testimony as a source of justified belief. The idea is that a notion of justification transmission is indispensable to a complete epistemology of testimony. I begin by establishing what justification transmission amounts to (and what it doesn't amount to) and defend the idea from its various critics. Next I turn to consider the first explanation and offer an example that illustrates why it can't give a complete account of justification from testimony by itself. Lastly, I discuss the third explanation and argue that it too fails to provide a satisfying framework for understanding how testimony is a source of justified belief.100University of Sheffieldhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.631427http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/7306/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 100
spellingShingle 100
Wright, Stephen
The nature of testimonial justification
description It's generally agreed that testimony can be a source of knowledge and justified belief. The epistemology of testimony concerns itself with explaining how this can be the case. This thesis begins by identifying three types of explanation. According to the first explanation, my testimony can induce a justified belief in you because you use the reasons that you have available to you to infer the truth of what I say from the fact that I said it. According to the second explanation, my testimony can induce a justified belief in you because the processes involved in you forming the belief on the basis of my testimony are suitably reliable. And according to the third explanation, my testimony can induce a justified belief in you because I have justification for what I say and my testimony allows you to form a belief that's supported by this justification. Having identified three different types of explanation, I argue that neither the first nor the second type of explanation can give a full account of testimony as a source of justified belief. The idea is that a notion of justification transmission is indispensable to a complete epistemology of testimony. I begin by establishing what justification transmission amounts to (and what it doesn't amount to) and defend the idea from its various critics. Next I turn to consider the first explanation and offer an example that illustrates why it can't give a complete account of justification from testimony by itself. Lastly, I discuss the third explanation and argue that it too fails to provide a satisfying framework for understanding how testimony is a source of justified belief.
author2 Faulkner, Paul ; Fricker, Miranda ; Hopkins, Rob
author_facet Faulkner, Paul ; Fricker, Miranda ; Hopkins, Rob
Wright, Stephen
author Wright, Stephen
author_sort Wright, Stephen
title The nature of testimonial justification
title_short The nature of testimonial justification
title_full The nature of testimonial justification
title_fullStr The nature of testimonial justification
title_full_unstemmed The nature of testimonial justification
title_sort nature of testimonial justification
publisher University of Sheffield
publishDate 2014
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.631427
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