Repository | Book
Epistemology, knowledge and the impact of interaction
Abstract
With this volume of the series Logic, Epistemology, and the Unity of Science edited by S. Rahman et al. a challenging dialogue is being continued. The series' first volume argued that one way to recover the connections between logic, philosophy of sciences, and sciences is to acknowledge the host of alternative logics which are currently being developed. The present volume focuses on four key themes. First of all, several chapters unpack the connection between knowledge and epistemology with particular focus on the notion of knowledge as resulting from interaction. Secondly, new epistemological perspectives on linguistics, the foundations of mathematics and logic, physics, biology and law are a subject of analysis. Thirdly, several chapters are dedicated to a discussion of Constructive Type Theory and more generally of the proof-theoretical notion of meaning. Finally, the book brings together studies on the epistemic role of abduction and argumentation theory, both linked to non-monotonic approaches to the dynamics of knowledge.
Details | Table of Contents
pp.3-45
two approaches
pp.47-62
the challenges of the dialogical approach to constructive type theory
pp.63-122
pp.123-139
pp.141-184
pp.237-249
for a paraconsistent topological model
pp.251-268
pp.269-282
pp.297-307
a virtue-contextualist approach
pp.309-321
pp.323-341
pp.343-362
predicates, functions, categories and argument structure
pp.363-379
pp.403-432
pp.433-444
a probabilistic interpretation
pp.445-461
towards a Peircean theory of diagrammatic imagination
pp.463-481
elements of an alternative theoretical framework towards an objective notion of emergence
pp.485-505
a contribution to the epistemological debate on the philosophy of physics
pp.521-532
the strange case of the basic norm
pp.533-542
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Dordrecht
Year: 2016
Pages: 554
ISBN (hardback): 978-3-319-26504-9
ISBN (digital): 978-3-319-26506-3
Full citation:
Redmond Juan, Martins Olga Pombo, Fernández Ángel Nepomuceno (2016) Epistemology, knowledge and the impact of interaction. Dordrecht, Springer.