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Call for Papers

"Folk Epistemology"
European Review of Philosophy
Issue 8 (2008)

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The ability to assess the truth of an utterance, the
validity of an inference or the reliability of a mental
representation - including those inferred from observable
behaviour - is a fundamental aspect of human cognition. "A
is justified in thinking that p", "B is trustworthy when she
says that q", "C is deceiving", are examples of evaluative
representations typically involved in knowledge acquisition.

Epistemology has traditionally focused on the normative
conditions under which knowledge is acquired, thus producing
a corpus of norms on the justification of knowledge claims.
>>From a different perspective, we might ask whether a
psychological explanation can be provided to account for
epistemic evaluation abilities. How can empirical
investigations elucidate the nature, development and
cognitive function of evaluative representations? Are there
domain-specific, cross-cultural capacities underpinning the
evaluation of truth and reliability of mental
representations? Eventually, what are the relations between
the norms described by epistemology and the actual
psychological processes underpinning evaluation of truth and
epistemic reliability?

The study of mental processes underlying epistemological
skills may support the hypothesis of a dedicated "folk
epistemology" system. Over the last decades many cases of
domain-specific cognitive systems with dedicated inferential
resources have been identified in infants and higher
primates. These include folk physics, folk biology, folk
arithmetics, folk psychology, among others. Can the ability
to judge truth and epistemic reliability be accounted for
interms of a folk epistemology system? The goal of the
present volume is to bring together contributions on this
topic from different areas of investigation such as:
philosophy, developmental psychology, cognitive ethology,
social cognition, pragmatics, sociology of knowledge,
cultural anthropology.

Relevant questions include the following:
- What is the proper domain of a folk epistemology system?
- Do epistemic evaluations involve conscious thinking?
- To what extent does language enhance epistemic
  evaluations?
- Are there selective impairments of folk epistemology
  capacities?
- Are epistemic evaluations human-specific?
- How does folk epistemology contribute to rational
  thinking?
- Are meta-representations required for epistemic
  evaluation?
- What are the relations (if any) between normative
  epistemology, commonsense epistemology and folk
  epistemology? How does folk epistemology relate to our
  naive understanding of truth?
- Which aspects of culture could be explained on the basis
  of a folk epistemology?
- Do deferential practices rely on the existence of a folk
  epistemology?
- Do subjects share the same epistemological intuitions
  across cultures? Or do epistemologies vary across
  cultures?
- Are there foreseeable evolutionary grounds for the
  selection of folk epistemology capacities?
- The aim of the present project is to synthesise and
  evaluate the progress made in the research fields
  concerned, and to promote an interdisciplinary discussion
  on the natural bases of epistemic evaluation capacities.

Submissions:

Submissions should be addressed electronically to:
[email protected]

1 Jan 2008: submission deadline
1 Dec 2008: date of publication

Papers should describe original and previously unpublished
work. Submitted papers must be in English and should not
exceed 8000 words, with an abstract of up to 200 words. The
following formats are accepted for submission: RTF, PDF,
DOC, LATEX. Authors are invited to follow the stylistic
guidelines, templates and detailed instructions available
here.

Submitted papers will be reviewed by the Editors and
blind-reviewed by two anonymous referees. For the purpose of
blind refereeing, authors are requested not to include their
name and affiliation in their manuscript, but in a separate
file. Each submission should consist of two distinct files:
- A frontpage containing the title of the paper, the name
  and affiliation of the author(s), as well as any
  acknowledgment.
- The manuscript of the paper (containing only the title,
  the abstract and the body of the article).

More information for prospective authors are available on
this page: http://www.erp-review.org/guidelines.php

Established in Geneva in 1994, the European Review of
Philosophy is a peer-reviewed journal edited yearly at the
Jean Nicod Institute, Paris. It publishes thematic volumes
on philosophical and foundational issues in cognitive
science.

Editors:

Christophe Heintz
Nausicaa Pouscoulous
Dario Taraborelli

Intending authors should make direct contact with the guest
editors of the relevant issue by writing to:
[email protected]


Contact:

European Review of Philosophy
Institut Jean Nicod
Pavillon Jardin
Ecole Normale Supérieure
29 rue d'Ulm
F-75005 Paris
France
Fax: +33 1 44 32 26 99
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.erp-review.org

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