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An externalist theory might argue that S's belief that p is justified provided it was formed in a reliable belief-formation process R ( ...
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Internalist Externalist Coherentism Reliabilism Cartesian (Classical) Foundationalism Givenist Foundationalism Virtue Epistemology
(^1) There are a number of other possible formulations of internalism, e.g. (i) S can show that p , or (ii) S’s
belief that p is accessible from an internal standpoint, or (iii) S’s belief that p depends upon a factors that are internal to S’s perspective. See Alvin, Goldman. 1980. The Internalist Conception of Justification.
A theory of epistemic justification is externalist =Df. S’s belief that p does not depend solely on factors that are directly accessible through S’s internal reflection.
general. That is, animals and children have particular beliefs (p, q, r) but don’t necessarily belief anything about the faculty F in general. Therefore they cannot be justified about p, q, r, because they cannot be justified about F. But, animals and children are justified about p, q, r , therefore the objection is absurd.
#2 There are many particular beliefs (e.g. 2+2=4, I am in pain, I exist) that we are justified in but we don’t know if we are justified in the procedure that produces them.
The argument is logically circular.^2
Reply #2 to Track Record Argument (the argument from Practical Rationality)
Objection #2 to Track Record Argument
The track record argument is absurd because it makes every belief-formation process reliable (i.e. justified).
For example, consider a set of beliefs formed by a variety of suspicious belief-formation processes (e.g. crystal ball, method of tenacity, method of authority, a priori method). In using the crystal ball, John believes p, q, r. If John wants to determine whether or not p, q, and r are the case, in order to do this, John uses the crystal ball to check. This is absurd. Reply #3 to the Objection from Practical Rationality
There is an obvious difference between forming one’s belief by a crystal ball, the method of authority, or the method of tenacity, and forming one’s belief on the basis of perception, memory, reason. The former are only thought to be reliable , while the latter are actually reliable.
Objection #3 to Argument from Practical Rationality
The argument is absurd for two reasons.
#1 The argument is circular. How does one know that perception, memory, reason are firmly-established, time-tested methods without assuming to perception, memory, and reason.
#2 The argument is not convincing. A crystal ball user will argue that using a crystal ball is firmly established in him/her. Also, there are other methods that are (perhaps) more firmly established, e.g. the method of authority.
(^2) A justification/argument for the reliability of a faculty F is epistemically circular = Df. (1) the beliefs b
that justify F are formed by F. That is, assuming the reliability of the source of belief in order to argue for the reliability of the source of that belief. A justification/argument for the reliability of a faculty F is logically circular = Df. (1) the conclusion of the argument is identical to one of the premises.