Routledge Handbook of Applied Epistemology

Routledge Handbook of Applied Epistemology

Chase, James; Coady, David

Taylor & Francis Ltd

08/2018

356

Dura

Inglês

9781138932654

15 a 20 dias

794

Descrição não disponível.
Notes on contributors. PART I Introduction 1. The return of applied epistemology, James Chase and David Coady. PART II The internet. 2. The World Wide Web, Paul Smart and Nigel Shadbolt. 3. Wikipedia, Karen Frost-Arnold. 4. Googling, Hanna Kiri Gunn and Michael P. Lynch. 5. Adversarial epistemology on the internet, Don Fallis. PART III Politics. 6. John Stuart Mill on free speech, Daniel Halliday and Helen McCabe. 7. Epistemic democracy, Jason Brennan. 8. Epistemic injustice and feminist epistemology, Andrea Pitts. 9. Propaganda and ideology, Randal Marlin. PART IV Science. 10. Expertise in climate science, Stephen John. 11. Evidence-based medicine, Robyn Bluhm and Kirstin Borgerson. 12. The precautionary principle in medical research and policy: the case of sponsorship bias, Daniel Steel. 13 Psychology and conspiracy theories, David Coady. PART V Epistemic institutions. 14 Legal burdens of proof and statistical evidence, Georgi Gardiner. 15. Banking and finance: disentangling the epistemic failings of the 2008 financial crisis, Lisa Warenski. 16. Applied epistemology of education, Ben Kotzee. PART VI Individual investigators. 17. Disagreement, Tim Kenyon. 18. Forecasting, Steve Fuller. 19. Rumor, Axel Gelfert. 20. Gossip, Tommaso Bertolotti and Lorenzo Magnani. 21. The applied epistemology of conspiracy theories: an overview, M R.X Dentith and Brian L. Keeley. PART VII Theory and practice in philosophy. 22. Philosophical expertise, Bryan Frances, 23. Ethical expertise, Christopher Cowley. 24. The demise of grand narratives? Postmodernism, power-knowledge, and applied epistemology, Matthew Sharpe. Index.
Young Man;Procedure Independent Standards;david coady;NRSRO;applied epistemology;Quod Nihil Scitur;epistemology;Inductive Risk;applied philosophy;Condorcet's Jury Theorem;ethics;Knowledge Acquisition;applied ethics;political philosophy;Charles Pigden;social epistemology;Epistemic Injustice;Epistemic Institutions;descartes;Epistemic Peers;locke;Testimonial Knowledge;scepticism;Sponsorship Bias;conservatism;Feminist Epistemology;hume;Epistemic Democracy;mill;Thomson's Account;marx;Prison Abolition;postmodern epistemology;Epistemic Practices;Vaccine Refusal;propoganda;Crowd View;ideology;Language Games;surveillance;Clinical Practice;privacy;Individualized Evidence;Ethical Expertise;philosophy of education;philosophy of law;philosophy of science and technology;internet;improvised knowledge;evidence based medicine;philosophy of medicine;medical ethics;James Chase;Paul Smart;Nigel Shadbolt;Karen Frost-Arnold;Hanna Kiri Gunn;Michael P. Lynch;Don Fallis;Daniel Halliday;Helen McCabe;Jason Brennan;Andrea Pitts;Randal Marlin;Stephen John;Robyn Bluhm;Kirstin Borgerson;Daniel Steel;Georgi Gardiner;Lisa Warenski;Ben Kotzee;Tim Kenyon;Steve Fuller;Axel Gelfert;Tommaso Bertolotti;Lorenzo Magnani;M. R. X. Dentith;Brian L. Keeley;Bryan Frances;Christopher Cowley;Matthew Sharpe