Veritism is the idea that what makes a belief epistemically rational is that it is a fitting response to the value of truth. This idea promises to serve as the foundation for an elegant and systematic treatment of epistemic rationality, one that illuminates the importance of distinctively epistemic normative standards without sacrificing extensional adequacy. But this article proposes that veritism cannot fulfill this promise. It goes on to explain why not, in part by showing that three radically different developments of veritism—one consequentialist, one deontological, and one virtue-theoretic—face eerily similar problems. This article also attempts to provide a general explanation of why any version of veritism is doomed to fail. If these arguments are successful, their upshot is that we must look beyond the value of truth if we want to understand the nature and significance of epistemic rationality.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Research Article|
October 01 2024
Epistemic Rationality and the Value of Truth
The Philosophical Review (2024) 133 (4): 329–365.
Citation
Sophia Dandelet; Epistemic Rationality and the Value of Truth. The Philosophical Review 1 October 2024; 133 (4): 329–365. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00318108-11494797
Download citation file:
Advertisement
329
Views