Joachim Horvath
University of Cologne
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Featured researches published by Joachim Horvath.
Philosophical Psychology | 2010
Joachim Horvath
In this paper, I am going to offer a reconstruction of a challenge to intuition-based armchair philosophy that has been put forward by experimental philosophers of a restrictionist stripe, which I will call the ‘master argument’. I will then discuss a number of popular objections to this argument and explain why they either fail to cast doubt on its first, empirical premise or do not go deep enough to make for a lasting rebuttal. Next, I will consider two more promising objections, the grounding objection and the expertise objection, which aim at the second, epistemic premise of the argument. Against this background, I will then suggest what I call ‘conservative restrictionism’ as the most reasonable default reaction to the experimentalist challenge, which is a combination of the two views of local restrictionism and methodological conservativism.
Synthese | 2016
Joachim Horvath
There is a line of reasoning in metaepistemology that is congenial to naturalism and hard to resist, yet ultimately misguided: that knowledge might be a natural kind, and that this would undermine the use of conceptual analysis in the theory of knowledge. In this paper, I first bring out various problems with Hilary Kornblith’s argument from the causal–explanatory indispensability of knowledge to the natural kindhood of knowledge. I then criticize the argument from the natural kindhood of knowledge against the method of conceptual analysis in the theory of knowledge. A natural motivation for this argument is the following seemingly plausible principle: if knowledge is a natural kind, then the concept of knowledge is a natural kind concept. Since this principle lacks adequate support, the crucial semantic claim that the concept of knowledge is a natural kind concept must be defended in some more direct way. However, there are two striking epistemic disanalogies between the concept of knowledge and paradigmatic natural kind concepts that militate against this semantic claim. Conceptual analyses of knowledge are not affected by total error, and the proponents of such analyses are not subject to a priori conceptual obliviousness. I conclude that the argument from natural kindhood does not succeed in undermining the use of conceptual analysis in the theory of knowledge.
Philosophical Psychology | 2010
Joachim Horvath; Thomas Grundmann
In this brief introduction, we would first like to explain how these two special issues of Philosophical Psychology (23.3 and 23.4) actually came about. In addition, we will provide an outline of their overall structure and shortly summarize the featured papers.
Grazer Philosophische Studien | 2009
Joachim Horvath
Th e Swamping Problem is one of the standard objections to reliabilism. If one assumes, as reliabilism does, that truth is the only non-instrumental epistemic value, then the worry is that the additional value of knowledge over true belief cannot be adequately explained, for reliability only has instrumental value relative to the non-instrumental value of truth. Goldman and Olsson reply to this objection that reliabilist knowledge raises the objective probability of future true beliefs and is thus more valuable than mere true belief. I argue against their proposed solution to the Swamping Problem that the conditional probability of future true beliefs given knowledge is not clearly higher than given mere true belief.
Philosophical Studies | 2014
Thomas Grundmann; Joachim Horvath
Philosophical Studies | 2016
Joachim Horvath; Alex Wiegmann
Thought: A Journal of Philosophy | 2014
Joachim Horvath
Archive | 2012
Joachim Horvath; Thomas Grundmann
Ratio | 2008
Frank Hofmann; Joachim Horvath
Ratio | 2009
Joachim Horvath