The Place of Informal Logic in Philosophy

Authors

  • James B. Freeman Hunter College of The City University of New York

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22329/il.v20i2.2264

Keywords:

applied epistemology, acceptability, relevance, ground adequacy, justification, foundationalism, properly basic belief, interpretation, evaluation

Abstract

We argue that informal logic is epistemological. Two central questions concern premise acceptability and connection adequacy. Both may be explicated in tenns of justification, a central epistemological concept. That some premises are basic parallels a foundationalist account of basic beliefs and epistemic support. Some epistemological accounts of these concepts may advance the analysis of premise acceptability and connection adequacy. Infonnallogic has implications for other aspects of philosophy. If causal interpretations are acceptable premises and thus justified, does the world have a causal structure? If evaluative premises are acceptable, i.e., justified, is value an objective feature of the world?

Downloads

Published

2000-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles