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VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260604T203706Z
DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20221202T150000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20221202T170000
SUMMARY:Axiological non-evidentialism
UID:20260606T175101Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Australia/Melbourne
LOCATION:250 Victoria Parade\, East Melbourne\, Australia\, 3002
DESCRIPTION:<p>The core idea behind non-evidentialist responses to scepticism is that acceptance of anti-sceptical hypotheses (e.g.\,&nbsp\;<em>I&rsquo\;m not a brain-in-vat</em>) enjoy a positive epistemic standing without evidence. The aim of this talk is to introduce and discuss two fundamental issues concerning non-evidentialism: the question of value and the issue of generosity.</p>\n<p>One major issue confronting non-evidentialists is that it remains unclear how\, in the absence of evidence\, acceptance of anti-sceptical hypotheses can enjoy a positive epistemic standing. I suggest that this issue is linked to a fundamental question of value: it is unclear how acceptance of anti-sceptical hypotheses can enjoy a positive epistemic standing because it is unclear how such acceptance can be&nbsp\;<em>epistemically good</em>. I address the question of value by introducing a pluralist axiology for non-evidentialism. The axiology incorporates two dual epistemic goals: attain truth and avoid error\, and attain meta-cognitive coherence and avoid meta-cognitive incoherence. Meta-cognitive coherence is a certain higher-order epistemic good that is realized when a subject can coherently regard beliefs as warranted. I suggest that meta-cognitive coherence is a natural epistemic good to embrace given the kind of higher-order conception of scepticism that some non-evidentialists buy into (including\, e.g.\, Crispin Wright). Taking on board meta-cognitive coherence as an epistemic good puts the non-evidentialist in a position to address the issue of value: accepting anti-sceptical hypotheses is epistemically good because it promotes meta-cognitive coherence.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>The issue of generosity emerges because the non-evidentialist account appears to apply to pairs of incompatible propositions&mdash\;including\, e.g.\, anti-scepticial hypotheses and their negations. If so\, &nbsp\;non-evidentialist epistemology might be thought too indiscriminate and too generous. I argue that there is a certain sense in which non-evidentialism is generous but\, likewise\, that this is not surprising. My argument is based on considerations concerning key features of meta-cognitive coherence and the idea that it goes naturally with a form of epistemic relativism.&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Kyle H. Blumberg:
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