The Contingent Unknowability of Facts and its Relation with Informal, Epistemological Contexts

Autores

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/1808-1711.2017v21n1p61

Resumo

This paper focuses on elements that are involved in a specific type of judgment, namely, those involving facts that, in virtue of contingent reasons, are out of our epistemic reach. Its goal is to propose a philosophical explanation about why we, in informal contexts, take some facts as contingently unknowable. In order to accomplish that goal, we develop a theory that defines contingently unknowable facts in a very specific way. We establish three clauses that are jointly necessary and sufficient — so we argue — for taking an arbitrary fact as contingently unknowable. In a variety of contexts, this strategy has the potential of reducing efforts in an epistemological analysis of this particular type of unknowability.

Biografia do Autor

Stanley Kreiter Bezerra Medeiros, IFRN

Professor do Instituto Federal do Rio Grande do Norte. Atua nas áreas de ensino de filosofia, epistemologia, lógica informal,  filosofia da ciência e da tecnologia.

Publicado

2017-11-16

Edição

Seção

Artigos