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Claiming to know is more than making a report about one's epistemic
position: one also offers one's assurance to others. What is an
assurance? In this book, Krista Lawlor unites J. L. Austin's
insights about the pragmatics of assurance-giving and the semantics
of knowledge claims into a systematic whole. The central theme in
the Austinian view is that of reasonableness: appeal to a
'reasonable person' standard makes the practice of assurance-giving
possible, and lets our knowledge claims be true despite differences
in practical interests and disagreement among speakers and hearers.
Lawlor provides an original account of how the Austinian view
addresses a number of difficulties for contextualist semantic
theories, resolves closure-based skeptical paradoxes, and helps us
to tread the line between acknowledging our fallibility and
skepticism.
This book defends a novel theory of singular concepts, emphasizing
the pragmatic requirements of singular concept possession and
arguing that these requirements must be understood to institute
traditions and policies of thought.
Series Information: Studies in Philosophy
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