articleNoûsAug 20, 2007Closed access

Reflection and Disagreement

University of the West · Princeton University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Abstract How should you take into account the opinions of an advisor? When you completely defer to the advisor's judgment (the manner in which she responds to her evidence), then you should treat the advisor as a guru. Roughly, that means you should believe what you expect she would believe, if supplied with your extra evidence. When the advisor is your own future self, the resulting principle amounts to a version of the Reflection Principle—a version amended to handle cases of information loss. When you count an advisor as an epistemic peer, you should give her conclusions the same weight as your own. Denying that view—call it the “equal weight view”—leads to absurdity: the absurdity that you could reasonably…

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624
total citations
FWCI
163.94
Percentile
100%
References
44
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Absurdity
  • Epistemology
  • Reflection (computer programming)
  • Psychology
  • Philosophy
  • Computer science
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