ON WILLIAMSON'S ARGUMENTS THAT KNOWLEDGE IS A MENTAL STATE |
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Authors: | Adam Leite |
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Affiliation: | Department of Philosophy Indiana University, Bloomington Sycamore Hall 026 1033 East Third St. Bloomington, IN, USA 47405 |
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Abstract: | In Knowledge and Its Limits, Timothy Williamson argues that knowledge is a purely mental state, that is, that it is never a complex state or condition comprising mental factors and non‐mental, environmental factors. Three of his arguments are evaluated: arguments from (1) the non‐analyzability of the concept of knowledge, (2) the ‘primeness’ of knowledge, and (3) the (alleged) inability to satisfactorily specify the ‘internal’ element involved in knowledge. None of these arguments succeeds. Moreover, consideration of the third argument points the way to a cogent argument that knowledge is not a purely mental state. |
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