Principia: An International Journal of Epistemology (Dec 2010)

Contextualism, skepticism, and invariantism

  • Stephen Jacobson

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
pp. 375 – 392

Abstract

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Michael Williams and Keith DeRose defend their different versions of contextualism on the grounds that contextualism gives a better account of the ordinary use of epistemic terms than invariantist competitors. One aim of this paper is to explain why their arguments do not succeed. A further aim is to show that the dispute between contextualists and invariantists portrayed by Williams and DeRose is a narrow interpretation of the dispute: there are important contextualist and invariantist positions which fall outside the scope of their arguments and which a full defense of contextualism should consider.

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