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(2013) In defense of intuitions, Dordrecht, Springer.

Introduction

the old rationalism and the new rationalism

Andrew Chapman , Addison Ellis , Robert Hanna , Henry Pickford

pp. 1-6

The philosophical debate about the possibility of authentic a priori knowledge, that is, non-stipulative, non-trivial knowledge of the way the world necessarily is, obtained sufficiently independently of any and all sense-experiential episodes and/or contingent natural facts, is no less important today than it was when Plato posited in the Meno that we are able to have such knowledge owing to a pre-natal close encounter that our disembodied souls had with the Forms, and when Descartes posited in the Meditations on First Philosophy that such knowledge is infallible because guaranteed by a non-deceiving God. Of course, neither the platonic story nor the Cartesian story about our purported a priori abilities has many adherents today. Nevertheless, a large majority of philosophers (71.1 percent, according to a recent PhilPapers survey1) do indeed believe that a priori knowledge is really possible.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9781137347954_1

Full citation:

Chapman, A. , Ellis, A. , Hanna, R. , Pickford, (2013). Introduction: the old rationalism and the new rationalism, in In defense of intuitions, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 1-6.

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