Idealization in epistemology: a modest modeling approach

New York: Oxford University Press (2023)
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Abstract

It's standard in epistemology to approach questions about knowledge and rational belief using idealized, simplified models. But while the practice of constructing idealized models in epistemology is old, metaepistemological reflection on that practice is not. Greco argues that the fact that epistemologists build idealized models isn't merely a metaepistemological observation that can leave first-order epistemological debates untouched. Rather, once we view epistemology through the lens of idealization and model-building, the landscape looks quite different. Constructing idealized models is likely the best epistemologists can do. Once one starts using epistemological categories like belief, knowledge, and confidence, the realm of idealization and model-building is entered. We can object to a model of knowledge by pointing to a better model, but in the absence of a better model, the fact that a framework for epistemologizing theorizing involves simplifications, approximations, and other inaccuracies-the fact of its status as an idealized model-is not in itself objectionable. Once we accept that theorizing in epistemological terms is inescapably idealized, a number of intriguing possibilities open up. Greco defends a package of epistemological views that might otherwise have looked indefensibly dismissive of our cognitive limitations-a package according to which we know a wide variety of facts with certainty, including what our evidence is, what we know and don't know, and what follows from our knowledge.

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Daniel Greco
Yale University

Citations of this work

Coherence and Incoherence.Daniel Fogal & Olle Risberg - forthcoming - Philosophical Review.
Coastlines, consequence, and collapse.Christopher Blake-Turner - 2025 - Asian Journal of Philosophy 4 (1):1-21.
On Believing and Being Convinced.Paul Silva Jr - 2025 - Cambridge University Press.
On non-ideal individual epistemology.Brett Karlan - 2024 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies:1-7.

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