Welcome!
To use the personalized features of this site, please log in or register.
If you have forgotten your username or password, we can help.
My Menu
Saved Items

Goering Special Issue

Understanding and the facts

Catherine ElginContact Information

(1)  Graduate School of Education, Harvard University, Appian Way, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

Received: 6 October 2006  Accepted: 7 November 2006  Published online: 30 November 2006

Abstract  If understanding is factive, the propositions that express an understanding are true. I argue that a factive conception of understanding is unduly restrictive. It neither reflects our practices in ascribing understanding nor does justice to contemporary science. For science uses idealizations and models that do not mirror the facts. Strictly speaking, they are false. By appeal to exemplification, I devise a more generous, flexible conception of understanding that accommodates science, reflects our practices, and shows a sufficient but not slavish sensitivity to the facts.

Keywords  Understanding - Exemplification - Factive - Model - Idealization - Fiction


Contact Information Catherine Elgin
Email: catherine_elgin@harvard.edu

Fulltext Preview (Small, Large)
Image of the first page of the fulltext

References secured to subscribers.



Export this article
Export this article as RIS | Text
 
Remote Address: 38.103.63.61 • Server: mpweb05
HTTP User Agent: CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)