Humberstone’s Paradox and Conjunction

Erkenntnis 89 (3):1183-1195 (2024)
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Abstract

Humberstone has shown that if some set of agents is collectively omniscient (every true proposition is known by at least one agent) then one of them alone must be omniscient. The result is paradoxical as it seems possible for a set of agents to partition resources whereby at the level of the whole community they enjoy eventual omniscience. The Humberstone paradox only requires the assumption that knowledge distributes over conjunction and as such can be viewed as a reductio against the universal validity of that principle. A new route to this paradox is presented which does not require the distribution principle, building on earlier work of Jago and Williamson on Fitch’s paradox. The result relies on an axiom strictly weaker than one necessary for the Jago-Fitch variant. It is shown that the same reasoning behind the variant form of Humberstone’s paradox can recover Bigelow’s results in action theory in a way that is immune to an objection brought against it by Guigon and Humberstone.

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Eric Updike
Glendale Community College

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References found in this work

A logical analysis of some value concepts.Frederic Fitch - 1963 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 28 (2):135-142.
There are no fundamental facts.Roberto Loss - 2021 - Analysis 81 (1):32-39.
Verificationism and non-distributive knowledge.Timothy Williamson - 1993 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 71 (1):78 – 86.

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