The Dynamic Strategy of Common Sense Against Radical Revisionism
Keywords: 
Common sense
Radical revisionism
Belief revision
Skepticism
Moorean facts
Dynamic epistemology
Gilbert Harman
Issue Date: 
2023
Publisher: 
Springer
ISSN: 
1572-8749
Note: 
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Citation: 
Guillon, J.B. (Jean-Baptiste). "The Dynamic Strategy of Common Sense Against Radical Revisionism". Topoi. 42, 2023, 141 - 162
Abstract
Common-sense philosophers typically maintain that common-sense propositions have a certain kind of epistemic privilege that allows them to evade the threats of skepticism or radical revisionism. But why do they have this special privilege? In response to this question, the “Common-Sense Tradition” contains many different strands of arguments. In this paper, I will develop a strategy that combines two of these strands of arguments. First, the “Dynamic Argument” (or the “starting-point argument”), inspired by Thomas Reid and Charles S. Peirce (but which will be strengthened with the help of Gilbert Harman’s epistemology of belief revision). Second, G.E. Moore’s “greater certainty argument” (interpreted along the lines of Soames’ and Pollock’s construal). This combined strategy, I will argue, is the strong core of Common-Sense Philosophy, and relies on extremely modest and widely held assumptions.

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