Intuition as Conscious Experience

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A01=Ole Koksvik
Absent Defeat
Agent's Epistemic State
Agent’s Epistemic State
Agnostic
Author_Ole Koksvik
Category=QD
Category=QDTK
Category=QDTM
Conscious Belief
Conscious Experience
Doxastic Justification
Doxastic State
Epistemic Agents
epistemology
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Inductive Justification
Intuitional Experience
Intuitional experiences
Justification Hypothesis
justification of moral intuitions
Justified Belief
Mere True Belief
Metaphysics
moral justification
Partial Belief
perceptual experience
Perceptual Justification
Phenomenal Character
Phenomenal Context
Phenomenal Contrast
Phenomenalism
phenomenology
philosophical methodology
Presentational Phenomenology
Propositional Justification
Psychological Kind
rational belief formation
Representational Content
Strong Justification
Vice Versa
Wo

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367632502
  • Weight: 300g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Is torturing the innocent OK?

Just now something happened: it seemed to you that torturing the innocent is wrong. What kind of mental state were you in? What is its nature? Perhaps you now believe that torturing the innocent is wrong because it just seemed to you that it is. If so, that seems appropriate. But is it really, and if so, what could explain this?

In this book, Koksvik argues these mental states form a psychological kind called ‘intuition’, and that having an intuition indeed justifies you in believing what it says. What explains this, he argues, is how similar intuition is to perception. Through a detailed examination he shows that intuition, just like perception, is a conscious experience, and that the two experience types have important properties in common, in virtue of which they can both justify belief.

In sharp contrast to traditional thought, Koksvik argues that intuition is completely unrestricted in content: we have intuitions about morality and metaphysics, but also about all sorts of everyday things, like danger or trustworthiness, and in all cases they can justify. The use of intuition is thus not only a legitimate part of philosophical and scientific practice, it also plays a pervasive, important and legitimate role in all of our everyday rational lives.

Ole Koksvik works both at the intersection of philosophy of mind and epistemology, and in political philosophy with a special focus on global poverty. To find out more, visit his website: www.koksvik.net

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