DeRose Flashcards
What argument does DeRose’s paper center on?
Argument from Ignorance
(AI)
What is DeRose’s aim in “Solving the Skeptical Problem”?
To show how the skeptic’s conclusion is false while also explaining why the Argument from Ignorance seems compelling.
What is DeRose’s objection to those who say that the reason why we don’t know we are not brains-in-vats (BIVs) is because we cannot rule out that hypothesis?
Talking of “ruling out being a BIV” is just as much in need of explanation as talking of “knowing that you are not a BIV”; these are just different wordings of the same problem.
What is DeRose’s main complaint against other contextualist efforts to handle the problem of skepticism?
They haven’t really explained how the skeptic manages to raise the standards for knowledge.
When you are thinking about whether you know you have hands, why does DeRose think “I might just falsely believe I have hands” is not as compelling as a skeptical hypothesis as “I might be a handless brain in a vat”?
Because “I might just falsely believe I have hands” doesn’t explain how you end up believing something false.
What is DeRose’s ultimate strategy for handling the “Argument from Ignorance” (AI) that he introduced back on p.1 of the article?
He shows why the first premise seems true, but argues that it only really expresses a truth if we set our standards for knowledge very high.
What would be a “true but insensitive belief” in the sense that DeRose is using that phrase in this paper?
A true belief that you would still hold even if it were false.