Brett Coppenger: Traditional Internalism: An Introduction
Chapter Abstracts
I. Traditional Internalism and Non-Inferentially Justified
Belief
Direct Acquaintance
1: Peter Markie: Confrontation Foundationalism
2: Chris Tucker: Acquaintance and Fallible Non-Inferential
Justification
3: Matthias Steup: Foundational Justification, Meta-Justification,
and Fumertonian Acquaintance
Perceptual Belief
4: Berit Brogaard: Staying Indoors: How Phenomenal Dogmatism Solves
the Skeptical Problem without Going Externalist
5: Susanna Schellenberg: Experience and Evidence Abridged
II. Traditional Internalism and Inferentially Justified Belief
6: Trent Dougherty: Principles of Inferential Justification
7: Michael Huemer: Inferential Appearances
III. Traditional Internalism and Skepticism
Responding to the Skeptic
8: Sanford Goldberg: The Costs of Demon-Proof Justification
9: Ted Poston: Acquaintance and Skepticism about the Past
Skepticism and Circularity
10: Duncan Pritchard and Christopher Ranalli: On
Metaepistemological Scepticism
11: Ernest Sosa: How Our Knowledge Squares With Skeptical
Intuitions Despite the Circle
Afterword
12: Richard Fumerton: The Prospects for Traditional Internalism
Brett Coppenger is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Tuskegee
University.
Michael Bergmann is Professor of Philosophy at Purdue University.
In addition to numerous articles in epistemology and philosophy of
religion in journals and edited volumes, he is author of
Justification without Awareness (OUP 2006) and co-editor of Divine
Evil? The Moral Character of the God of Abraham (OUP 2011),
Challenges to Moral and Religious Belief: Disagreement and
Evolution (OUP 2014), and Reason and Faith: Themes from Swinburne
(OUP 2016).
this volume does indeed identify many of the serious challenges
facing a successful traditional internalist theory, Fumerton's or
otherwise. As such, it is an essential resource for anyone
interested in these issues.
*Sharon Mason, Philosophy in Review*
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