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Reason and the Past: The Role of Rationality in Diachronic Self-Knowledge
Authors:Krista?Lawlor  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:klawlor@stanford.edu"   title="  klawlor@stanford.edu"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author
Affiliation:(1) Department of Philosophy, Stanford University Building, 90, Room 91-C, Stanford, CA, 94305-2155, U.S.A.
Abstract:Knowing one’s past thoughts and attitudes is a vital sort of self-knowledge. In the absence of memorial impressions to serve as evidence, we face a pressing question of how such self-knowledge is possible. Recently, philosophers of mind have argued that self-knowledge of past attitudes supervenes on rationality. I examine two kinds of argument for this supervenience claim, one from cognitive dynamics, and one from practical rationality, and reject both. I present an alternative account, on which knowledge of past attitudes is inferential knowledge, and depends upon contingent facts of one’s rationality and consistency. Failures of self-knowledge are better explained by the inferential account.
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