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The Epistemology of Disagreement: New Essays

David Christensen and Jennifer Lackey, eds. (Oxford University Press: June 10, 2013), 288 pages.

The Epistemology of Disagreement brings together essays from a dozen philosophers on the epistemic significance of disagreement; all but one of the essays are new. Questions discussed include: When (if ever) does the disagreement of others require a rational agent to revise her beliefs? Do ‘conciliatory’ accounts, on which agents are required to revise significantly, suffer from fatal problems of self-defeat, given the disagreement about disagreement? What is the significance of disagreement about philosophical topics in particular? How does the epistemology of disagreement relate to broader epistemic theorizing? Does the increased significance of multiple disagreeing agents depend on their being independent of one another?


John Hawthorne and Amia Srinivasan, Thomas Kelly, and Brian Weatherson all weigh in with attacks on conciliatory views or defenses of non-conciliatory approaches. David Christensen and Stewart Cohen take up the opposite side of the debate. Bryan Frances, Sanford Goldberg, and Ernest Sosa discuss a kind of disagreement that will be of particular concern to most readers of this book: disagreement about philosophy. And Robert Audi, Jonathan Kvanvig, and Jennifer Lackey tackle some general theoretical issues that bear on disagreement. The philosophers represented here include some who have contributed actively to the disagreement literature already, as well as some who are exploring the issue for the first time. Their work helps to deepen and expand our understanding of some epistemic phenomena that are central to any thoughtful believer’s engagement with other believers.

Table of Contents

    • List of Contributors
    • Introduction, David Christensen and Jennifer Lackey
  • Part One: The Debate between Conciliatory and Steadfast Theorists
    • A. For Steadfastness
    • 1. Disagreement Without Transparency: Some Bleak Thoughts, John Hawthorne and Amia Srinivasan
    • 2. Disagreement and the Burdens of Judgment, Thomas Kelly
    • 3. Disagreements, Philosophical and Otherwise, Brian Weatherson
    • B. For Conciliation
    • 4. Epistemic Modesty Defended, David Christensen
    • 5. A Tentative Defense of the Equal Weight View, Stewart Cohen
  • Part Two: Disagreement in Philosophy
    • 6. Philosophical Renegades, Bryan Frances
    • 7. Disagreement, Defeat, and Assertion, Sanford Goldberg
    • 8. Can There Be a Discipline of Philosophy? And Can It Be Founded on Intuitions?, Ernest Sosa
  • Part Three: New Concepts and New Problems in the Epistemology of Disagreement
    • 9. Cognitive Disparities: Dimensions of Intellectual Diversity and the Resolution of Disagreements, Robert Audi
    • 10. Perspectivalism and Reflective Ascent, Jonathan L. Kvanvig
    • 11. Disagreement and Belief Dependence: Why Numbers Matter, Jennifer Lackey
  • Index