Abstract
This paper explores Kornblith’s proposal in Knowledge and its Place in Nature that knowledge is a natural kind that can be elucidated and understood in scientific terms. Central to Kornblith’s development of this proposal is the claim that there is a single category of unreflective knowledge that is studied by cognitive ethologists and is the proper province of epistemology. This claim is challenged on the grounds that even unreflective knowledge in language-using humans reflects forms of logical reasoning that are in principle unavailable to nonlinguistic animals.
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Bermúdez, J.L. Knowledge, Naturalism, and Cognitive Ethology: Kornblith’s Knowledge and its Place in Nature . Philos Stud 127, 299–316 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11098-005-4960-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11098-005-4960-z