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Social virtue epistemology and epistemic exactingness

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Who deserves credit for epistemic successes, and who is to blame for epistemic failures? Extreme views, which would place responsibility either solely on the individual or solely on the individual's surrounding environment, are not plausible. Recently, progress has been made toward articulating virtue epistemology as a suitable middle ground. A socio-environmentally oriented virtue epistemology can recognize that an individual's traits play an important role in shaping what that individual believes, while also recognizing that some of the most efficacious individual traits have to do with how individuals structure their epistemic environments and how they respond to information received within these environments. I contribute to the development of such an epistemology by introducing and elucidating the virtue of epistemic exactingness, which is characterized by a motivation to regulate the epistemically significant conduct of others.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages16
JournalEpisteme. A Journal of Social Epistemology
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 27 Jan 2025

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 603102 Epistemology

Keywords

  • self-respect
  • social epistemology
  • testimony
  • Assertion
  • power
  • virtue responsibilism
  • virtue reliabilism

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