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- Anthony Brueckner (2006). Justification and Moore's Paradox. Analysis 66 (291):264–266.
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Propositions such as <It is raining, but I do not believe that it is
raining> are paradoxical, in that even though they can be true, they cannot be truly
asserted or believed. This is Moore’s paradox. Sydney Shoemaker has recently ar-
gued that the paradox arises from a constitutive relation that holds between first- and
second-order beliefs. This paper explores this approach to the paradox. Although
Shoemaker’s own account of the paradox is rejected, a different account along
similar lines is endorsed. At the core of the endorsed account is the claim that
conscious beliefs are always partly about themselves; it will be shown to follow from
this that conscious beliefs in Moorean propositions are self-contradictory.
We shall evaluate two strategies for motivating the view that knowledge is the norm of belief. The first draws on observations concerning belief's aim and the parallels between belief and assertion. The second appeals to observations concerning Moore's Paradox. Neither of these strategies gives us good reason to accept the knowledge account. The considerations offered in support of this account motivate only the weaker account on which truth is the fundamental norm of belief.
For Moore, it is a paradox that although I would be absurd in asserting that (it is raining but I don.
This paper refutes two important and influential views in one fell stroke. The first is G.E. Moore’s view that assertions of the form ‘Q but I don’t believe that Q’ are inherently “absurd.” The second is Gareth Evans’s view that justification to assert Q entails justification to assert that you believe Q. Both views run aground the possibility of being justified in accepting eliminativism about belief. A corollary is that a principle recently defended by John Williams is also false, namely, that justification to believe Q entails justification to believe that you believe Q.
The author discusses solutions to Moore’s Paradox by Moore and Wittgenstein and then offers one of his own: ‘I believe that P’ and ‘not-P’ can both be true but nonetheless are not epistemically compatible; that is, it is logically impossible simultaneously to have sufficient evidence to justify assertions of each. The author then argues that similar transgressions are committed by other “paradoxical” utterances whose paradoxicality cannot be explained by the Moore or Wittgenstein solutions and also that this provides a technique that can be useful in studying the epistemic requirements for justified assertion.
This paper argues that justification is accessible in the sense that one has justification to believe a proposition if and only if one has higher-order justification to believe that one has justification to believe that proposition. I argue that the accessibility of justification is required for explaining what is wrong with believing Moorean conjunctions of the form, ‘p and I do not have justification to believe that p.’.
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