Friday 04 July 2008
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CALL FOR PAPERS

Folk Epistemology

European Review of Philosophy, 8 (2008)

Christophe Heintz, Nausicaa Pouscoulous & Dario Taraborelli (Eds.)

Submission deadline: 1 January 2008

The ability to assess the truth of an utterance, the validity of an inference or the reliability of a mental representation - including those inferred from observable behaviour - is a fundamental aspect of human cognition. “A is justified in thinking that p”, “B is trustworthy when she says that q”, “C is deceiving”, are examples of evaluative representations typically involved in knowledge acquisition.

Epistemology has traditionally focused on the normative conditions under which knowledge is acquired, thus producing a corpus of norms on the justification of knowledge claims. From a different perspective, we might ask whether a psychological explanation can be provided to account for epistemic evaluation abilities. How can empirical investigations elucidate the nature, development and cognitive function of evaluative representations? Are there domain-specific, cross-cultural capacities underpinning the evaluation of truth and reliability of mental representations? Eventually, what are the relations between the norms described by epistemology and the actual psychological processes underpinning evaluation of truth and epistemic reliability?

The study of mental processes underlying epistemological skills may support the hypothesis of a dedicated “folk epistemology” system. Over the last decades many cases of domain-specific cognitive systems with dedicated inferential resources have been identified in infants and higher primates. These include folk physics, folk biology, folk arithmetics, folk psychology, among others. Can the ability to judge truth and epistemic reliability be accounted for interms of a folk epistemology system? The goal of the present volume is to bring together contributions on this topic from different areas of investigation such as: philosophy, developmental psychology, cognitive ethology, social cognition, pragmatics, sociology of knowledge, cultural anthropology.

Relevant questions include the following:

The aim of the present project is to synthesise and evaluate the progress made in the research fields concerned, and to promote an interdisciplinary discussion on the natural bases of epistemic evaluation capacities.

Guest authors

Submissions

Submissions should be addressed electronically to:
folk.epistemology@erp-review.org.

Instructions for authors

Papers should describe original and previously unpublished work. Submitted papers must be in English and should not exceed 8000 words, with an abstract of up to 200 words. The following formats are accepted for submission: RTF, PDF, DOC, LATEX. Authors are invited to follow the stylistic guidelines, templates and detailed instructions available here.

Submitted papers will be reviewed by the Editors and blind-reviewed by two anonymous referees. For the purpose of blind refereeing, authors are requested not to include their name and affiliation in their manuscript, but in a separate file. Each submission should consist of two distinct files:

More information for prospective authors are available on this page.

Important dates

About the journal

Established in Geneva in 1994, the European Review of Philosophy is a peer-reviewed journal edited yearly at the Jean Nicod Institute, Paris. It publishes thematic issues on philosophical and foundational aspects of the scientific study of cognition.

Contact

Intending authors should make direct contact with the guest editors of the relevant issue by writing to: folk.epistemology@erp-review.org

For other inquiries please refer to our contact page.

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