Welp, I’ve only been reading this blog for 2007. Silly me. I just read the post and all the comments. I have to say that Philip Bricker has the upper hand.
Bricker suggested the option that you advocate, by the way. But he dismisses it. Here’s why, I think: If you suspend judgment in response to reasonable disagreement, you’re going to have to suspend judgment about basically all philosophical theses. By doing so, you’re going to run yourself into quite a few problems.
Note: By ‘old-fashioned’, I meant that the view advocated in the post relies on epistemological ideas that most epistemologists reject. I sure hope that has something to do with whether it’s true. Although, maybe it doesn’t.
G,
Welp, I’ve only been reading this blog for 2007. Silly me. I just read the post and all the comments. I have to say that Philip Bricker has the upper hand.
Bricker suggested the option that you advocate, by the way. But he dismisses it. Here’s why, I think: If you suspend judgment in response to reasonable disagreement, you’re going to have to suspend judgment about basically all philosophical theses. By doing so, you’re going to run yourself into quite a few problems.
Note: By ‘old-fashioned’, I meant that the view advocated in the post relies on epistemological ideas that most epistemologists reject. I sure hope that has something to do with whether it’s true. Although, maybe it doesn’t.