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Believable Normative Error Theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 November 2021
Abstract
Normative error theory is thought by some to be unbelievable because they suppose the incompatibility of believing a proposition at the same time as believing that one has no normative reason to believe it—which believing in normative error theory would seem to involve. In this article, I argue that normative holism is believable and that a normative holist will believe that the truth of a proposition does not invariably generate a normative reason to believe it. I outline five different scenarios in which this is believably the case. I then show how each example can be used to generate a counterexample to the incompatibility claim. I conclude that believing a proposition is compatible with believing there is no reason to believe it and that as such normative error theory has not yet been shown to be unbelievable.
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- Information
- Journal of the American Philosophical Association , Volume 8 , Issue 2 , Summer 2022 , pp. 208 - 223
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Philosophical Association