Narrow memory and wide knowledge: An argument
for the compatibility of externalism and self-knowledge
TIAN Ping,
Author information+
Research Center for
Value and Culture, School of Philosophy and Sociology, Beijing Normal
University, Beijing 100875, China;
Show less
History+
Published
05 Dec 2009
Issue Date
05 Dec 2009
Abstract
The development of the semantic externalism in the 1970s was followed by a debate on the compatibility of externalism and self-knowledge. Boghossian’s memory argument is one of the most important arguments against the compatibilist view. However, some compatibilists attack Boghossian’s argument by pointing out that his understanding of memory is internalistic. Ludlow and others developed the externalist view of memory to defend the compatibility of externalism and self-knowledge. However, the externalist view of memory undermines the epistemic status of memory since it gives memory a burden that is too heavy for it to carry. This paper argues that only if we take the content of memory to be narrow and take that of self-knowledge to be wide and replace Cartesian self-knowledge with contextually constrained self-knowledge, can the compatibility of externalism and self-knowledge be effectively defended.
TIAN Ping,.
Narrow memory and wide knowledge: An argument
for the compatibility of externalism and self-knowledge. Front. Philos. China, 2009, 4(4): 604‒615 https://doi.org/10.1007/s11466-009-0040-3
{{custom_sec.title}}
{{custom_sec.title}}
{{custom_sec.content}}
This is a preview of subscription content, contact us for subscripton.
AI Summary ×
Note: Please note that the content below is AI-generated. Frontiers Journals website shall not be held liable for any consequences associated with the use of this content.