AG Heinzelmann, 22.10.2024 Coherence and Incoherence
- Date in the past
- Tuesday, 22. October 2024, 18:15 - 19:45
- Hegelsaal, Institute of Philosophy, Schulgasse 6, 69117 Heidelberg
- Daniel Fogal (Philosophy, New York University)
- Olle Risberg (Uppsala)
In the recent literature on coherence and structural rationality, it is widely assumed that sets of attitudes are coherent just in case they are not incoherent. In particular, the two most popular kinds of views of incoherence—those centered around wide scope rational requirements and those centered around guaranteed failures of some normatively significant kind—rely on this assumption. We argue that this assumption should be rejected because it fails to capture the difference between positively coherent attitudes and random unrelated ones. We also formulate and defend an alternative support-centric view of coherence and incoherence which captures this difference and has several additional advantages.
About Daniel Fogal:
Dr. Daniel Fogal is an Assistant Professor of Bioethics at NYU and Faculty Adviser for the Bioethics Minor. He studied at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo (B.A.) and completed his Ph.D. at NYU. His research spans bioethics, metaethics, epistemology, and philosophy of language, with work published in Mind, Nous, and Philosophical Studies. Previously, he was a Visiting Assistant Professor at NYU and a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Uppsala University.
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Hegelsaal, Institute of Philosophy, Schulgasse 6, 69117 Heidelberg
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