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Publication details

Year: 2018

Pages: 3051-3064

Series: Synthese

Full citation:

Matthew McGrath, "Defeating pragmatic encroachment?", Synthese 195 (7), 2018, pp. 3051-3064.

Abstract

This paper examines the prospects of a prima facie attractive response to Fantl and McGrath’s argument for pragmatic encroachment. The response concedes that if one knows a proposition to be true then that proposition is warranted enough for one to have it as a reason for action. But it denies pragmatic encroachment, insofar as it denies that whether one knows a proposition to be true can vary with the practical stakes, holding fixed strength of warrant. This paper explores two ways to allow knowledge-reason links without pragmatic encroachment, both of which appeal to defeat. The first appeals to defeaters of reasons. If you know the bank is open tomorrow, what you know is available as a reason, but it may be defeated by considerations concerning the stakes. The second appeals to defeaters which do not defeat reasons but which nonetheless do something similar: they make the action recommended by those reasons vicious. In a high stakes case performing the “risky” action would be vicious even if it is justified in the sense of being supported by undefeated reasons. What is defeated is a virtue-based epistemic status rather than reasons or justification. I argue that neither proposal halts the march from a knowledge-reason link to pragmatic encroachment.

Publication details

Year: 2018

Pages: 3051-3064

Series: Synthese

Full citation:

Matthew McGrath, "Defeating pragmatic encroachment?", Synthese 195 (7), 2018, pp. 3051-3064.