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Testimony from a Popperian PerspectiveUniversity of Birmingham, England Currently, testimony is studied extensively in Anglo-American philosophy. However, most of this work is done from a justificationist perspective in which philosophers try to justify our reliance on testimony in some way. I agree with Popper that justificationism is radically mistaken. Thus, I construct an account of how we respond to testimony that in no way attempts to justify our reliance on it. This account is not a straightforward exegesis of Popper, as he never tackled testimony systematically. It makes use, however, of several of Popper's key insights and incorporates them into a viable theory of testimony.
Key Words: testimony anti-justificationism social epistemology situational analysis defeasibility
This version was published on December
1, 2008 Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Vol. 38, No. 4,
419-456 (2008) |
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