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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Oldenbourg February 11, 2016

Experts, Teachers and Their Epistemic Roles in Normative and Non-normative Domains

Comments on Dieter Birnbacher and Karen Jones & François Schroeter

  • Tobias Steinig
From the journal Analyse & Kritik

Abstract

Goldman's notions of expert and testimony in epistemological contexts are extended to normative issues. The result is a sketch of a conceptual framework: several types of experts and roles they can serve in informing not specially qualified recipients are distinguished; differences between experts in epistemological and moral contexts are highlighted. This framework then is the point of reference for claims about experts, expertise and moral testimony in Birnbacher's and Jones & Schroeter's contributions to this volume. First, Birnbacher's worries about the legitimacy of moral philosophers sitting as experts on panels, etc. are allayed in one respect and aggravated in another: there are roles and qualifications open to informants about normative issues, but it is doubtful whether moral philosophers per se are up to each of them. Secondly, Jones & Schroeter's objection to Hills's claim that moral testimony cannot orient its recipient properly towards right-making reasons for acting is faulty.

Published Online: 2016-02-11
Published in Print: 2012-11-01

© 2012 by Lucius & Lucius, Stuttgart

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