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The Vagueness of Knowledge
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
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Epistemologists have profited from studies of the ways in which ‘know’ is ambiguous. We can also profit by studying the ways in which ‘know’ is vague. After classifying sources of vagueness for ‘know,’ I spend the second section examining theories of vagueness. With the exception of the theory that vague predicates are incoherent, which I try to refute, we need not take a stand on a particular theory to show that the vagueness of knowledge has substantive epistemological implications. The third section supports the thesis through a survey of ways in which appeals to vagueness can be applied to the field's issues. First, I show how higher order vagueness is evidence against the KK thesis, the incorrigibility of sense data, and the completability of epistemology. An interesting resemblance between infinity and vagueness provides the point of departure for the next type of application. For this resemblance suggests a new way of handling apparently infinite belief structures. The approach is illustrated with an analysis of common knowledge. The third type of application concerns the ways in which disguised sorites creep into our thinking about knowledge. In addition to brief illustrations concerning naive holism, question begging, and an objection to incorrigibilism, I provide more detailed illustrations involving Jonathan Adler's sceptical appeal to epistemic universalizability, the prediction paradox, and William Lycan's objection to Gilbert Harman's social knowledge cases. I conclude with some general remarks on the lessons to be learned from the vagueness of knowledge.
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- Copyright © The Authors 1987
References
1 This paper has benefited from the comments and criticisms of two anonymous referees.
2 Stephen Stich discusses this position in ‘Do Animals Have Beliefs?,’ Australasian Journal of Philosophy (1979) 15-28; quot. from 19.
3 Edmund Gettier presented his counterexamples in ‘Is Justified True Belief Knowledge?,’ Analysis 23 (1963) 121-3.
4 This point was made in Saunders, John Turk and Champawat's, Narayan ‘Mr. Clark's Definition of “Knowledge”’ Analysis 24, 6 (June 1964), 8–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar. They are also responsible for the example of the scientist.
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10 I present the details of this criticism in ‘An Argument for the Vagueness of “Vague,”’ Analysis 45 (1985) 134-7. I also argue that the paradoxes of vagueness cannot be avoided by restricting logic to nonvague terms.
11 An excellent example of the supervaluationist's approach can be found in Kit Fine's ‘Vagueness, Truth, and Logic,’ Synthese 30 (1975) 265-300.
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31 By ‘justification’ Adler means ‘justification sufficient for knowledge.’ The explanation of ‘defeated’ is: ‘If p justifies q, then the justification is defeated if there is some truth d such that p & d fail to justify q.’ Both of these technical terms are used for convenience. Adler's argument is compatible with alternate terminologies.
32 Ibid., 149
33 Ibid., 155-6
34 Shaw's seminal contribution appeared in ‘The Paradox of the Unexpected Examination,’ Mind 67 (1958) 382-4.
35 I adopt this approach in ‘Conditional Blindspots and the Knowledge Squeeze: A Solution to the Prediction Paradox,’ Australasian Journal of Philosophy 62 (1984) 126-35.
36 Harman presents these cases in Thought (Princeton: Princeton University Press 1973).
37 Lycan, William ‘Evidence One Does Not Possess,’ Australasian Journal of Philosophy 55 (1977) 114–26CrossRefGoogle Scholar; quot. from 119
38 Ibid., 121
39 Ibid.
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