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(2012) Synthese 188 (2).

Epistemic closure, skepticism and defeasibility

Claudio de Almeida

pp. 197-215

Those of us who have followed Fred Dretske’s lead with regard to epistemic closure and its impact on skepticism have been half-wrong for the last four decades. But those who have opposed our Dretskean stance, contextualists in particular, have been just wrong. We have been half-right. Dretske rightly claimed that epistemic status is not closed under logical implication. Unlike the Dretskean cases, the new counterexamples to closure offered here render every form of contextualist pro-closure maneuvering useless. But there is a way of going wrong under Dretske’s lead. As the paper argues, Cartesian skepticism thrives on closure failure in a way that is yet to be acknowledged in the literature. The skeptic can make do with principles which are weaker than the familiar closure principles. But I will further claim that this is only a momentary reprieve for the skeptic. As it turns out, one of the weaker principles on which a skeptical modus tollens must rest can be shown false.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-011-9923-7

Full citation:

de Almeida, C. (2012). Epistemic closure, skepticism and defeasibility. Synthese 188 (2), pp. 197-215.

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