
Optimality Justifications
New Foundations for Epistemology
Gerhard Schurz(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 8. February 2024
Book
Hardback
330 pages
978-0-19-888754-6 (ISBN)
Description
The leading idea of epistemology in the Enlightenment tradition was foundation-theoretic: to reach knowledge, we must not legitimize our beliefs by external authorities, but instead justify them by rational arguments. Recently, the foundation-theoretic ideal of justification has come under attack, the chief criticism being that universal standards of justification are illusory because the problem of a regress of justification is unsolvable. Alternatives to foundation theory (coherentism, externalism, or dogmatism) have been developed that give up central claims of Enlightenment epistemology such as empirical support, cognitive accessibility, or rational justifiability.
Optimality Justifications develops a new account of foundation-theoretic epistemology based on the method of optimality justifications. Optimality justifications offer a solution to the regress problem. Rather than striving for a priori demonstrations of reliability, which are impossible, they show that certain epistemic methods are optimal with regard to all accessible alternatives, which is more modestly but provably possible. In particular, optimality justifications can achieve a non-circular justification of deductive, inductive, and abductive reasoning.
This volume pursues two goals: a general renewal of foundation-theoretic epistemology based on the account of optimality justifications, and the advancement of methods of optimality justification in important domains of epistemology and the philosophy of science, logic, and cognition. Connected with these goals is the aspiration to develop new ideas for mainstream epistemology, as well as for formal epistemology, philosophy of science, and cognitive science, which are intended to attract researchers, students, and all other readers interested in these fields.
Optimality Justifications develops a new account of foundation-theoretic epistemology based on the method of optimality justifications. Optimality justifications offer a solution to the regress problem. Rather than striving for a priori demonstrations of reliability, which are impossible, they show that certain epistemic methods are optimal with regard to all accessible alternatives, which is more modestly but provably possible. In particular, optimality justifications can achieve a non-circular justification of deductive, inductive, and abductive reasoning.
This volume pursues two goals: a general renewal of foundation-theoretic epistemology based on the account of optimality justifications, and the advancement of methods of optimality justification in important domains of epistemology and the philosophy of science, logic, and cognition. Connected with these goals is the aspiration to develop new ideas for mainstream epistemology, as well as for formal epistemology, philosophy of science, and cognitive science, which are intended to attract researchers, students, and all other readers interested in these fields.
Reviews / Votes
Optimality Justifications is a book that greatly rewards careful study. It is the product of many years of careful, rigorous, and original thought about one of the deepest problems in philosophy-namely, the normative standing of our everyday and scientific beliefs-and every chapter contains novel insights. Moreover, Schurz's treatment of the theories he ultimately wishes to usurp are charitable, careful, and illuminating. An exemplary piece of philosophy. * Richard Pettigrew, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
658 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-888754-6 (9780198887546)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
01/2024
1st Edition
OUP eBook
€78.99
Available for download
Person
Gerhard Schurz is Professor for Philosophy at the University of Duesseldorf, where he previously hed the Chair of Theoretical Philosophy (2002-2022). He was formerly Associate Professor at the University of Salzburg and Visiting Professor at the University of California at Irvine and at Yale University. Gerhard Schurz is the author of ten books and more than 250 research papers in the fields of philosophy of science, epistemology, logic, cognitive science, and metaethics. He was President of the German Association for Philosophy of Science (2016-2022). Since 2019, he is member of the Leopoldina (National Academy of Sciences in Germany) and of the International Academy of Philosophy of Science.
Content
Introduction
1: Knowledge and Justification
2: Foundation Theory and Its Alternatives: A Critical Discussion
3: Foundation-theoretic Epistemology I: Internalism and Minimal Basis
4: Foundation-theoretic Epistemology II: Conditional Justification and Noncircularity
5: Foundation-theoretic Epistemology III: Optimality Justifications
6: Justification of Inductive Reasoning
7: From Optimal Inductive Methods to Optimal Beliefs
8: Justification of Logics and Conceptual Frameworks
9: Abductive Inference to Theories
10: The Justification of Theory-Generating Abduction
11: Conclusion and Outlook
Mathematical Appendix
1: Knowledge and Justification
2: Foundation Theory and Its Alternatives: A Critical Discussion
3: Foundation-theoretic Epistemology I: Internalism and Minimal Basis
4: Foundation-theoretic Epistemology II: Conditional Justification and Noncircularity
5: Foundation-theoretic Epistemology III: Optimality Justifications
6: Justification of Inductive Reasoning
7: From Optimal Inductive Methods to Optimal Beliefs
8: Justification of Logics and Conceptual Frameworks
9: Abductive Inference to Theories
10: The Justification of Theory-Generating Abduction
11: Conclusion and Outlook
Mathematical Appendix