The Meaning of “Normativity” within Naturalized Epistemology. Some Consequences of Naturalizing Epistemic Norms

Dialogue and Universalism 18 (7-8):149-160 (2008)
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Abstract

The paper undertakes the problem of normativity within naturalized epistemology. The following issue is analyzed: can naturalism be developed as a normative enterprise, and if it can, what conditions it must satisfy to achieve a status of epistemology? According to “the standard condition”, in order to give a substantial account of normativity naturalism must present a theory of epistemic norms which are derived from descriptive statements about facts but which are not reduced to them. The thesis is that although naturalism cannot present the conception of genuine epistemic norms which satisfy “the standard condition” it is still normative. Namely, within naturalism epistemic norms are descriptive statements about empirical phenomena which are expressed in normative form for the sake of everyday life and scientific practice

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Barbara Trybulec
Maria Curie-Sklodowska University

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