Knowledge Without Foundations: A Causal Theory
Dissertation, Cornell University (
1980)
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Abstract
In Chapter Four, it is argued that coherence is evidence of truth. A sketch of a theory of approximate truth is developed in terms of the theory of reference outlined in Chapter Three, and this notion is put to work in showing that there is reason to believe that most of our beliefs are at least approximately true. It is then argued that coherence with approximately true beliefs, and thus the beliefs we have, is evidence of truth. ;In Chapter Three, the connection between the theory of knowledge and the theory of reference is explored. The relation between Russell's theory of knowledge and his theory of reference is discussed, and it is argued that Russell was quite correct in insisting that there be a close relationship between these two disciplines. A theory of reference is developed which parallels the causal theory of knowledge presented in Chapter One. This theory is a variant of the causal, or historical theory, presented by Donnellan, Kripke, Putnam and Boyd. ;In Chapter One, an outline of a causal theory of knowledge is presented. It is argued that knowledge is reliably produced true belief, and that a process is reliable just in case it tends to produce true beliefs in relevant actual, as well as counterfactual, situations. ;In Chapter Two, the implications of this account for the debate between foundationalists and coherence theorists is examined. It is argued that standard foundational and coherentist accounts of justification share a common false presupposition, that the proper account of justification must be apsychological. It is argued that by rejecting this presupposition and adopting a causal theory of knowledge, it is possible to develop a theory which contains many of the important grains of truth in both foundationalism and coherentism. ;In this thesis, a causal theory of knowledge is elaborated and its implications examined