Essays on Skepticism
Anthony Brueckner
Table of Contents
Introduction
I. Transcendental Arguments against Skepticism
1. Transcendental Arguments I
2. Transcendental Arguments II
3. The Anti-Skeptical Strategy of the Refutation of Idealism
4. Modest Transcendental Arguments
5. Transcendental Arguments from Content Externalism
6. Stroud's 'Transcendental Arguments' Reconsidered
II. Semantic Answers to Skepticism
7. Brains in a Vat
8. Semantic Answers to Skepticism
9. Trees, Computer Program Features, and Skeptical Hypotheses
10. Cartesian Skepticism, Content Externalism, and Self-Knowledge
11. Terms of Envatment
12. Charity and Skepticism
13. The Omniscient Interpreter Rides Again
14. Singular Thought and Cartesian Philosophy
III. Self-Knowledge
15. Scepticism about Knowledge of Content
16. Knowledge of Content and Knowledge of the World
17. Externalism and Memory
18. What an Anti-Individualist Knows A Priori
19. The Characteristic Thesis of Anti-Individualism
20. Brewer on the McKinsey Problem
21. Wright on the McKinsey Problem
22. Externalism and Privileged Access Are Consistent
23. The Resiliency of the McKinsey Problem
IV. Skepticism and Epistemic Closure
24. Epistemic Universalizability Principles
25. Why Nozick is a Sceptic
26. Skepticism and Epistemic Closure
27. Unfair to Nozick
28. Problems with the Wright Route to Scepticism
29. The Structure of the Skeptical Argument
30. Klein on Closure and Skepticism
31. The Elusive Virtues of Contextualism
32. Strategies for Refuting Closure for Knowledge
33. Knowledge, Evidence, and Skepticism According to Williamso
34. Fallibilism, Underdetermination, and Skepticism
35. Some Comfort for the Closure Skeptic
36. Some Help for the Dogmatist
37. ~K~SK
Acknowledgements
Bibliography
Index