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The Epistemic Normativity of Knowing-How

From the book Abel im Dialog

  • Catherine Z. Elgin

Abstract

Knowing how to ride a bicycle, prove a theorem, tie a necktie, or play chess is, at least in part, an epistemic accomplishment. It is some sort of knowing. Abel (2012) argues that knowing how is irreducible to knowing that. No collection of knowings-that, however extensive, enables a person to play chess. I agree. He concludes that knowing how is therefore inscrutable. I argue that knowing how is akin to Aristotelian virtue - a matter of having a propensity to do the right thing at the right time for the right reason. The norm of the practice has been internalized, becoming second nature. I argue that rather than conforming to expressly stated rules, we model our behavior on exemplars - publicly available instances that manifest the features we seek to emulate. Since the exemplars are public, knowing-how is scrutable.

© 2018 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston
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