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2008 | 63 | 8 | 715-723

Article title

RELIABILISM, INTUITION, AND MATHEMATICAL KNOWLEDGE

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
It is alleged that the causal inertness of abstract objects and the causal conditions of certain naturalized epistemologies precludes the possibility of mathematical knowledge. This paper rejects this alleged incompatibility, while also maintaining that the objects of mathematical beliefs are abstract objects, by incorporating a naturalistically acceptable account of 'rational intuition'. On this view, rational intuition consists in a non-inferential belief-forming process where the entertaining of propositions or certain contemplations results in true beliefs. This view is free of any conditions incompatible with abstract objects, for the reason that it is not necessary that S stand in some causal relation to the entities in virtue of which p is true. Mathematical intuition is simply one kind of reliable process type, whose inputs are not abstract numbers, but rather, contemplations of abstract numbers.

Year

Volume

63

Issue

8

Pages

715-723

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

  • J. W. Mulnix, University Honors Program, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, 285 Old Westport Road, North Dartmouth, MA 02747, USA

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
08SKAAAA05356

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.528dfc50-0b90-3e35-a810-1a5122ca1907
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