The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology
How do we learn from one another on the internet? How can we defend ourselves from propaganda and seek the truth? How do our race, gender, and other aspects of our identity imbue how we learn and know things? Social epistemology explores timely and urgent questions such as these, which is why the field has seen an explosion of interest in recent years. Having originated as a subfield, social epistemology now permeates the agenda of mainstream epistemology, even though it challenges epistemology's traditional focus on the individual. The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology offers a collection of cutting-edge essays on many of the most important issues in this rapidly growing area of philosophy. It takes stock of recent developments in the field and reassesses topics that have been thought to fit comfortably within a more traditional approach to epistemology--including our capacities to know our own minds, to reason, and to remember--by examining the ways in which they might be significantly impacted by one's social environment. Several chapters interrogate the boundaries of what social epistemology is by exploring its application to significant issues outside of philosophy--such as psychology, sociology, and political theory--as well as the ways it intersects with ethics, the philosophies of language and mind, political philosophy, feminist philosophy, and critical philosophy of race. Divided into seven sections, this handbook provides a comprehensive coverage of work in this exciting and fertile area of philosophy as it highlights the relevance and importance of social factors to some of the most pressing epistemological questions facing us as agents in the world.
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The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology
How do we learn from one another on the internet? How can we defend ourselves from propaganda and seek the truth? How do our race, gender, and other aspects of our identity imbue how we learn and know things? Social epistemology explores timely and urgent questions such as these, which is why the field has seen an explosion of interest in recent years. Having originated as a subfield, social epistemology now permeates the agenda of mainstream epistemology, even though it challenges epistemology's traditional focus on the individual. The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology offers a collection of cutting-edge essays on many of the most important issues in this rapidly growing area of philosophy. It takes stock of recent developments in the field and reassesses topics that have been thought to fit comfortably within a more traditional approach to epistemology--including our capacities to know our own minds, to reason, and to remember--by examining the ways in which they might be significantly impacted by one's social environment. Several chapters interrogate the boundaries of what social epistemology is by exploring its application to significant issues outside of philosophy--such as psychology, sociology, and political theory--as well as the ways it intersects with ethics, the philosophies of language and mind, political philosophy, feminist philosophy, and critical philosophy of race. Divided into seven sections, this handbook provides a comprehensive coverage of work in this exciting and fertile area of philosophy as it highlights the relevance and importance of social factors to some of the most pressing epistemological questions facing us as agents in the world.
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The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology

The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology

The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology

The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology

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Overview

How do we learn from one another on the internet? How can we defend ourselves from propaganda and seek the truth? How do our race, gender, and other aspects of our identity imbue how we learn and know things? Social epistemology explores timely and urgent questions such as these, which is why the field has seen an explosion of interest in recent years. Having originated as a subfield, social epistemology now permeates the agenda of mainstream epistemology, even though it challenges epistemology's traditional focus on the individual. The Oxford Handbook of Social Epistemology offers a collection of cutting-edge essays on many of the most important issues in this rapidly growing area of philosophy. It takes stock of recent developments in the field and reassesses topics that have been thought to fit comfortably within a more traditional approach to epistemology--including our capacities to know our own minds, to reason, and to remember--by examining the ways in which they might be significantly impacted by one's social environment. Several chapters interrogate the boundaries of what social epistemology is by exploring its application to significant issues outside of philosophy--such as psychology, sociology, and political theory--as well as the ways it intersects with ethics, the philosophies of language and mind, political philosophy, feminist philosophy, and critical philosophy of race. Divided into seven sections, this handbook provides a comprehensive coverage of work in this exciting and fertile area of philosophy as it highlights the relevance and importance of social factors to some of the most pressing epistemological questions facing us as agents in the world.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190949969
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 05/09/2025
Series: Oxford Handbooks
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 894
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Jennifer Lackey is Wayne and Elizabeth Jones Professor of Philosophy and Professor of Law (courtesy) at Northwestern University, the Founding Director of the Northwestern Prison Education Program, and Senior Research Associate at the African Centre for Epistemology and Philosophy of Science at the University of Johannesburg. Lackey is the winner of the Dr. Martin R. Lebowitz and Eve Lewellis Lebowitz Prize for Philosophical Achievement and Contribution and the Horace Mann Medal from Brown University and her most recent book, Criminal Testimonial Injustice, won the North American Society for Social Philosophy 2024 Book Award. She has received grants and fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Aidan McGlynn is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh and Senior Research Associate at the African Centre for Epistemology and Philosophy of Science, University of Johannesburg. He is the author of Knowledge First? and is a co-editor-in-chief of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy.

Table of Contents

1. Communication and Epistemic Dependence 1. Assertion Christoph Kelp and Mona Simion 2. Testimony Axel Gelfert 3. Testimony and Perception Peter Graham 4. Epistemic Authority Christoph Jäger 5. Expertise Thomas Grundmann 2. Groups and Interpersonal Relationships 6. Group epistemology Fernando Broncano-Berrocal 7. Group ignorance Rik Peels & Thirza Lagawaard 8. Knowledge Attributions Patrick Rysiew 9. Trust J. Adam Carter 10. Partiality/Friendship Anna Brickerhoff and Nomy Arpaly 11. Adversial Epistemology Don Fallis 12. Disagreement & Bias Thomas Kelly 13. Social Epistemology and Social Cognition Shannon Spaulding 14. Epistemic Blame Jessica Brown 3. Epistemic Wrongs and Epistemic Reparations 15. Epistemic Injustice Aidan McGlynn 16. Epistemic Infringement Lauren Leydon-Hardy 17. Implicit Bias Katherine Puddifoot 18. Doxastic Addiction Carrie Figdor 19. Epistemic Reparations Jennifer Lackey 4. Applied Social Epistemology 20. Personalisation and scepticism Michael P. Lynch and Junyeol Kim 21. Social Media Joshua Habgood-Coote 22. Law Alexander Guerrero 23. Political Epistemology Michael Hannon and Elizabeth Edenberg 24. Disability Joel Michael Reynolds and Kevin Timpe 25. Climate change David Coady 5. Social Epistemic Goods 26. Standpoint Epistemology in science Kristen Intemann 27. Standpoint Epistemology and Ideology Briana Toole 28. Know How Yuri Cath 29. Understanding Allan Hazlett 30. Wisdom Sharon Ryan and Shane Ryan 31. Education Lani Watson 6. Social Perspectives on Individual Sources 32. Memory Alessandra Tanesini 33. Self-knowledge/first-person authority Cristina Borgoni 34. Reasoning Catarina Dutilh Novaes 7. Social Perspectives on Individualist Approaches 35. Extended knowledge Duncan Pritchard 36. Knowledge first Pascal Engel 37. Reliabilism Sanford Goldberg 38. Virtue Epistemology John Greco 39. Contextualism Jonathan Ichikawa 40. Evidentialism Jon Matheson 41. Hinge Annalisa Coliva
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