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Dive into the research topics where Emma C. Gordon is active.

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Featured researches published by Emma C. Gordon.


Canadian Journal of Philosophy | 2014

Openmindedness and truth

J. Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon

While openmindedness is often cited as a paradigmatic example of an intellectual virtue, the connection between openmindedness and truth is tenuous. Several strategies for reconciling this tension are considered, and each is shown to fail; it is thus claimed that openmindedness, when intellectually virtuous, bears no interesting essential connection to truth. In the final section, the implication of this result is assessed in the wider context of debates about epistemic value.


Synthese | 2014

A new maneuver against the epistemic relativist

J. Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon

Epistemic relativists often appeal to an epistemic incommensurability thesis. One notable example is the position advanced by Wittgenstein in On certainty (1969). However, Ian Hacking’s radical denial of the possibility of objective epistemic reasons for belief poses, we suggest, an even more forceful challenge to mainstream meta-epistemology. Our central objective will be to develop a novel strategy for defusing Hacking’s line of argument. Specifically, we show that the epistemic incommensurability thesis can be resisted even if we grant the very insights that lead Hacking to claim that epistemic reasons are always relative to a style of reasoning. Surprisingly, the key to defusing the argument is to be found in recent mainstream work on the epistemic state of objectual understanding.


Archive | 2016

Objectual understanding, factivity and belief

J. Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon

Should we regard Jennifer Lackey’s (2007) ‘Creationist Teacher’ as understanding evolution, even though she does not, given her religious convictions, believe its central claims? We think this question raises a range of important and unexplored questions about the relationship between understanding, factivity and belief. Our aim will be to diagnose this case in a principled way, and in doing so, to make some progress toward appreciating what objectual understanding—i.e., understanding a subject matter or body of information—demands of us. Here is the plan. After some ground clearing in §1, §2 outlines and motivates a plausible working model—moderate factivity—for characterising the sense in which objectual understanding should be regarded as factive. §3 shows how the datum that we can understand false theories can, despite initial suggestions to the contrary, be assimilated straightforwardly within the moderate factivity model. §4 highlights how the inverse kind of case to that explored in §3—viz., a variant of Lackey’s creationist teacher case—poses special problems for moderate factivity. With reference to recent work on moral understanding by Hills (2009), §5 proposes a solution to the problem, and §6 attempts to diagnose why it is that we might originally have been led to draw the wrong conclusion.


Philosophia | 2011

Norms of Assertion: The Quantity and Quality of Epistemic Support

J. Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon


American Philosophical Quarterly | 2014

Objectual Understanding and the Value Problem

J. Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon


Logos and Episteme | 2012

IS THERE PROPOSITIONAL UNDERSTANDING

Emma C. Gordon


Journal of Applied Philosophy | 2013

Intelligence, Wellbeing and Procreative Beneficence

J. Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon


Archive | 2017

Knowledge First: Approaches in Epistemology and Mind

J. Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon; Benjamin W. Jarvis


Archive | 2017

Pride: An introduction

Joseph Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon


Archive | 2017

The Moral Psychology of Pride

J. Adam Carter; Emma C. Gordon

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