The Context-Sensitivity of Rationality and Knowledge

My dissertation argues that the beliefs, desires, and preferences that count as rational may change from one deliberative context to another. The argument rests on the premise that rational deliberation requires one to identify all the possibilities that are relevant to a decision problem. How doe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kim, Brian Hyun
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/D8G73MSP
id ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-D8G73MSP
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-D8G73MSP2019-05-09T15:13:54ZThe Context-Sensitivity of Rationality and KnowledgeKim, Brian Hyun2012ThesesPhilosophyMy dissertation argues that the beliefs, desires, and preferences that count as rational may change from one deliberative context to another. The argument rests on the premise that rational deliberation requires one to identify all the possibilities that are relevant to a decision problem. How does a decision maker accomplish this task? What impact does this demarcation have on the beliefs and desires that she uses to deliberate? The answers I propose suggest changes to the way we view rational agents and what they know. Appealing to empirical research and normative concerns, I argue that an agent's deliberative beliefs, desires, and preferences are "constructed'' on a case to case basis and are distinct from the agent's stable set of background attitudes. For deliberative judgments depend upon the ways one specifies what is relevant for a decision problem and this may change from one context to the next. Upon articulating a suitable context-sensitive view of rational decision making, I develop accounts of warranted assertion, rational full belief and knowledge that are similarly context-sensitive. These views criticize simple constitutive norms of assertion, like the knowledge norm, and propose a way to connect degrees of belief and full belief. In addition, the proffered account of knowledge explains how knowledge precludes epistemic luck, as required by Gettier cases, by appealing to the way the standards of knowledge vary from one deliberative context to the next.Englishhttps://doi.org/10.7916/D8G73MSP
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Philosophy
spellingShingle Philosophy
Kim, Brian Hyun
The Context-Sensitivity of Rationality and Knowledge
description My dissertation argues that the beliefs, desires, and preferences that count as rational may change from one deliberative context to another. The argument rests on the premise that rational deliberation requires one to identify all the possibilities that are relevant to a decision problem. How does a decision maker accomplish this task? What impact does this demarcation have on the beliefs and desires that she uses to deliberate? The answers I propose suggest changes to the way we view rational agents and what they know. Appealing to empirical research and normative concerns, I argue that an agent's deliberative beliefs, desires, and preferences are "constructed'' on a case to case basis and are distinct from the agent's stable set of background attitudes. For deliberative judgments depend upon the ways one specifies what is relevant for a decision problem and this may change from one context to the next. Upon articulating a suitable context-sensitive view of rational decision making, I develop accounts of warranted assertion, rational full belief and knowledge that are similarly context-sensitive. These views criticize simple constitutive norms of assertion, like the knowledge norm, and propose a way to connect degrees of belief and full belief. In addition, the proffered account of knowledge explains how knowledge precludes epistemic luck, as required by Gettier cases, by appealing to the way the standards of knowledge vary from one deliberative context to the next.
author Kim, Brian Hyun
author_facet Kim, Brian Hyun
author_sort Kim, Brian Hyun
title The Context-Sensitivity of Rationality and Knowledge
title_short The Context-Sensitivity of Rationality and Knowledge
title_full The Context-Sensitivity of Rationality and Knowledge
title_fullStr The Context-Sensitivity of Rationality and Knowledge
title_full_unstemmed The Context-Sensitivity of Rationality and Knowledge
title_sort context-sensitivity of rationality and knowledge
publishDate 2012
url https://doi.org/10.7916/D8G73MSP
work_keys_str_mv AT kimbrianhyun thecontextsensitivityofrationalityandknowledge
AT kimbrianhyun contextsensitivityofrationalityandknowledge
_version_ 1719045459044990976