Beyond Intuitive Know-How

Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 24 (2):381-394 (2025)
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Abstract

According to Dreyfusian anti-intellectualism, know-how or expertise cannot be explained in terms of know-that and its cognates but only in terms of intuition. Hubert Dreyfus and Stuart Dreyfus do not exclude know-that and its cognates in explaining skilled action. However, they think that know-that and its cognates (such as calculative deliberation and perspectival deliberation) only operate either below or above the level of expertise. In agreement with some critics of Dreyfus and Dreyfus, in this paper, I argue that know-that and its cognates are constitutive of rather than external to know-how and expertise. However, unlike those critics, who argue for this point only from a phenomenological point of view, my argument adopts a (telic) normative point of view.

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Cheng-hung Tsai
Academia Sinica, Taiwan

References found in this work

Knowing Full Well.Ernest Sosa - 2010 - Princeton University Press.
Thought in Action: Expertise and the Conscious Mind.Barbara Montero - 2016 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK.
Epistemology.Ernest Sosa - 2017 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.

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