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Philosophy of the Social Sciences
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Infallibilism and Human Kinds

Francesco Guala*

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: francesco.guala{at}unimi.it.


   Abstract
Infallibilism and apriorism are still influential in the philosophy of social science. Infallibilists about human kinds claim that there are features of institutional entities about which we cannot possibly be wrong. But infallibilism is not implied by the theory of collective intentionality that supposedly grounds it. Moreover, it fails to account for the mode of existence of important institutional kinds, including the paradigmatic example of money.

First published on August 21, 2009
Philosophy of the Social Sciences 2009, doi:10.1177/0048393109343114


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