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Knowledge and Its Limits

Knowledge and Its Limits2000

Timothy Williamson

About this book

Knowledge and its Limits presents a systematic new conception of knowledge as a fundamental kind of mental state sensitive to the knower's environment. It makes a major contribution to the debate between externalist and internalist philosophies of mind, and breaks radically with theepistemological tradition of analysing knowledge in terms of true belief. The theory casts light on a wide variety of philosophical issues: the problem of scepticism, the nature of evidence, probability and assertion, the dispute between realism and anti-realism and the paradox of the surpriseexamination. Williamson relates the new conception to structural limits on knowledge which imply that what can be known never exhausts what is true. The arguments are illustrated by rigorous models based on epistemic logic and probability theory. The result is a new way of doing epistemology for thetwenty-first century.

Details

First published
2000
OL Work ID
OL2981213W

Subjects

Theory of KnowledgeWiedzaTeoriaKnowledge, theory ofPhilosophy of mind

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.