没有信仰的出版

IF 0.7 2区 哲学 Q1 Arts and Humanities
W. Fleisher
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引用次数: 6

摘要

亚历山德拉·普拉基亚(Alexandra Plakias)最近提出,哲学家可以发表他们不相信的观点。这就提出了一个问题:什么时候可以允许没有信仰的出版?总是这样吗?我提供了三个反例来反驳“没有信仰的出版总是被允许的”这一观点。我认为,只有当人们不相信某种主张时,才允许发表这种主张。我把这些称为倡导角色声明。另一种主张是不允许在没有信仰的情况下发表的:我称之为证据角色主张。这些类型根据它们的功能来区分。倡导角色声明旨在促进富有成效的辩论和分歧。证据角色要求的目的是增加共同的证据储备。结合这一区别的理论解释了普拉基亚案例与我案例之间的差异。它适用于哲学以外的各种领域的出版。哲学家们最近对如何正确对待有争议的哲学理论很感兴趣。有各种各样的理由怀疑信仰是否合适,因为证明信仰所需的高认知标准似乎排除了太多的哲学理论作为可行的选择。与此相关的是,人们担心哲学主张的断言,因为断言也被认为是由实体认知规范支配的。有鉴于此,人们提出了各种不同的态度,以表征哲学的承诺和主张Alexandra Plakias(2019)将这一讨论扩展到了哲学出版的主题。普拉基亚认为,哲学家可以撰写和出版包括他们不相信的主张的作品(例如,期刊文章或书籍),她将这种做法称为出版无信仰(PWB)她的论文谨慎地局限于哲学,而不是1 .关于担心信仰适当性的原因,请参见Frances (2010, 2013), Goldberg(2013)。关于提出的替代态度,请参见Barnett(2019)、Carter(2018)、Goldberg(2015)、McKaughan(2007)、Palmira(2019)和Fleisher(2018)。关于哲学主张的解释,请参见Goldberg(2015)和Fleisher(2019)。为了对出版所涉及的言论行为类型保持中立,我将从“主张”的角度来讨论。在这种用法中,权利要求是象征性的言语行为:以书面形式说出的陈述。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Publishing without (some) belief
Alexandra Plakias has recently argued that philosophers may permissibly publish claims they do not believe. This raises the question: when is it permissible to publish without belief? Is it always? I provide three counterexamples to the idea that it is always permissible to publish without belief. I argue that it is only permissible to publish a certain kind of claim when one does not believe it. I call these advocacy role claims. Another kind of claim is impermissible to publish without belief: what I call evidential role claims. These types are distinguished by their function. Advocacy role claims aim to promote productive debate and disagreement. Evidential role claims aim to add to the common stock of evidence. The resulting theory incorporating the distinction explains the differences between Plakias’ cases and mine. It is applicable to publishing in a wide variety of fields beyond philosophy. Philosophers have recently been interested in the appropriate attitude to have toward a controversial philosophical theory. There are a variety of reasons to doubt that belief is appropriate, as the high epistemic standards required for justified belief would seem to exclude too many philosophical theories as viable options. Relatedly, there are worries about assertions of philosophical claims, since assertion is also thought to be governed by substantive epistemic norms. In light of this, a variety of alternative attitudes have been proposed in order to characterize philosophical commitment and assertion.1 Alexandra Plakias (2019) has helpfully expanded this discussion to the topic of philosophical publication. Plakias argues that it is permissible for philosophers to write and publish works (e.g., journal articles or books) that include claims they do not believe, a practice she calls publishing without belief (PWB).2 Her thesis is carefully limited to philosophy, as opposed to 1For the reasons to worry about the appropriateness of belief, see Frances (2010, 2013), Goldberg (2013). For proposed alternative attitudes, see Barnett (2019), Carter (2018), Goldberg (2015), McKaughan (2007), Palmira (2019), and Fleisher (2018). For accounts of philosophical assertion, see Goldberg (2015) and Fleisher (2019). 2I will talk in terms of ‘claims’ in order to remain neutral about which types of speech acts publishing involves. On this usage, claims are token speech acts: statements uttered in writing.
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来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
期刊介绍: Thought: A Journal of Philosophy is dedicated to the publication of short (of less than 4500 words), original, philosophical papers in the following areas: Logic, Philosophy of Maths, Philosophy of Mind, Epistemology, Philosophy of Language, Metaphysics, and Value Theory. All published papers will be analytic in style. We intend that readers of Thought will be exposed to the most central and significant issues and positions in contemporary philosophy that fall under its remit. We will publish only papers that exemplify the highest standard of clarity. Thought aims to give a response to all authors within eight weeks of submission. Thought employs a triple-blind review system: the author''s identity is not revealed to the editors and referees, and the referee''s identity is not revealed to the author. Every submitted paper is appraised by the Subject Editor of the relevant subject area. Papers that pass to the editors are read by at least two experts in the relevant subject area.
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