Logomarca do periódico: Manuscrito

Open-access Manuscrito

Publicação de: UNICAMP - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Centro de Lógica, Epistemologia e História da Ciência
Área: Ciências Humanas
Versão impressa ISSN: 0100-6045
Versão on-line ISSN: 2317-630X
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Sumário

Manuscrito, Volume: 48, Número: 4, Publicado: 2025

Manuscrito, Volume: 48, Número: 4, Publicado: 2025

Document list
Documents
Original Articles
Defeating Luzzi's dilemma: on knowledge from falsehood, Gettierized belief, and defeasibility ALVES, EDUARDO

Resumo em Inglês:

Abstract Branden Fitelson (2010) proposes a strengthened version of knowledge from falsehood, according to which one may not have known that p had one not falsely believed that q. However, Federico Luzzi (2019) challenges Fitelson’s proposal. He believes that Fitelson’s account is unsuccessful because it depends on the unjustified assumption about the impossibility of knowledge from Gettierized belief. For Luzzi, Fitelson faces a dilemma: he must either accept knowledge from Gettierization and abandon his own theory about inferential knowledge from robustly false belief, or accept that knowledge from Gettierization is different from his account and deny knowledge from falsehood. He can’t have both. The goal of this paper is to dissolve that dilemma. The essay proceeds as follows. I explain Fitelson’s account and Luzzi’s objection against it. In the final section, I argue that a defeasibility theory of knowledge can help Fitelson defend himself against Luzzi’s objection and, therefore, dissolve the dilemma.
Original Articles
Mary and Propositional Knowledge Ramos, João

Resumo em Inglês:

Abstract I introduce what I call the Propositional Stance - the consensual claim that Frank Jackson’s Mary acquires new propositional knowledge - and discuss two prominent arguments that have been put forth in its favor. The first argument concerns the semantics of what-it-is-like sentences. The second argument concerns the epistemology of phenomenal belief. I argue that both arguments are unconvincing or lead to undesirable consequences, and then motivate non-propositional knowledge approaches to the puzzle of The Knowledge Argument.
Original Articles
On the possibility of fundamental facts BONDAR, OLEH

Resumo em Inglês:

Abstract Some facts are grounded, and some are fundamental (ungrounded). Roberto Loss has recently presented an argument (which is a counterpart of the famous Fitch's paradox of knowability) that there are no ungrounded facts. I argue that this argument is not unrestrictedly valid, and one of the central premises of Loss’s argument - distributivity of grounding (PG) - is not unrestrictedly true. Also, I offer a reason to think that all facts of the form “A is not a grounded fact” are fundamental.
Book Review
Review of Egan F. Deflating Mental Representation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 192, 2025. PEREIRA, ROBERTO HORÁCIO DE SÁ BARCELLOS, VICTOR MACHADO

Resumo em Inglês:

Abstract This review critically examines Frances Egan’s Deflating Mental Representation (MIT Press, 2025), a seminal work in the philosophy of mind that challenges traditional conceptions of mental representation and intentionality. Egan argues for a deflationary account wherein ascriptions of content to mental states are pragmatically grounded and serve primarily as explanatory tools, rather than reflecting substantive representational relations. The book navigates scientific, everyday, and philosophical contexts, showing how content attribution functions as a “gloss” that aids explanation without committing to metaphysical assumptions about representation. While Egan’s approach offers solutions to long-standing debates, it also faces critical tensions regarding the individuation of mental states and the role of the external environment. This review highlights both the originality and the philosophical challenges of Egan’s position, underscoring the book’s contribution to ongoing debates in cognitive science and the philosophy of mind.
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