Dissertation, University of Arizona (
2022)
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Abstract
Good Thinking is a collection of papers about abilities, skills, and know-how and the
distinctive but often overlooked—or explained away—role that these phenomena play
in various foundational issues in epistemology and action theory.
Each chapter, taken on its own, represents a fairly specific intervention into
debates in (i) epistemic responsibility, (ii) the nature of inferential justification, and (iii)
connections between inference and action. But taken collectively, these chapters
constitute fragments of a larger mosaic of commitments about the explanatory priority
of abilities in normative theories.
One distinctive argumentative strategy employed throughout Good Thinking is its
placing special emphasis on what might be called “bad thinking”: defective judgments
borne out of cognitive short-circuiting, incoherence or self-doubt, depression, or
anxiety. The underlying motivation for this is that much of what we can learn about
good thinking is only revealed at the margins, where thinking has in some respects
gone bad without being entirely spoiled.