Philosophy 122
Fall 2010
Number | Title | Instructor | Days/time | Room |
---|---|---|---|---|
122 | Theory of Knowledge | Roush | MWF 2-3 | 213 Wheeler |
By any (reasonable) account, human beings have more knowledge today than ever before due to the progress of science, but there is still philosophical disagreement about what knowledge is, how we should respond to radical skepticism, and how much science itself can tell us about knowledge. In this problem-oriented course we will study contemporary classics of epistemology on the topics of tracking, closure, relevant alternatives, reliabilism, internalism, externalism, and contextualism, among others. We will take epistemology to be responsible for understanding scientific cases of knowledge, and also consider the implications for epistemology of results in experimental psychology suggesting human beings’ lack of awareness of their true reasons for belief.
Previously taught: FL09 (Stroud), FL07 (Roush), SP07 (Fitelson), FL05 (Ginsborg), FL04 (Stroud).