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This volume features original essays that advance debates on
propositional and doxastic justification and explore how these
debates shape and are shaped by a range of established and emerging
topics in contemporary epistemology. This is the first book-length
project devoted to the distinction between propositional and
doxastic justification. Notably, the contributors cover the
relationship between propositional and doxastic justification and
group belief, credence, commitment, suspension, faith, and hope.
They also consider state-of-the-art work on knowledge-first
approaches to justification, hinge-epistemology, moral and
practical reasons for belief, epistemic normativity, and
applications of formal epistemology to traditional epistemological
disputes. Finally, the contributors promise to reinvigorate old
epistemological debates on coherentism, externalism, internalism,
and phenomenal conservatism. Propositional and Doxastic
Justification will be of interest to researchers and advanced
students working in epistemology, metaethics, and normativity.
Externalism about knowledge is thriving in contemporary
epistemology. Nonetheless, externalism is too often caricatured as
merely reliabilism, too often reduced to simply externalism about
justification, and rarely considered as a cohesive family of
related but importantly different views. Externalism About
Knowledge addresses all of these issues by bringing new essays from
leading externalist epistemologists working on seven different
branches of this tradition: process reliabilism, tracking views,
safety views, virtue epistemology, proper functionalism,
naturalized epistemology, and knowledge first epistemology. This
collection highlights their unity, their differences, their
interconnections, and their most recent challenges, developments,
and extensions.
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