
Knowledge by Agreement defends the ideas that knowledge is a social status (like money, or marriage), and that knowledge is primarily the possession of groups rather than individuals. Part I develops a new theory of testimony. It breaks with the traditional view according to which testimony is not, except accidentally, a generative source of knowledge. One important consequence of the new theory is a rejection of attempts to globally justify trust in the words of others. Part II proposes a communitarian theory of empirical knowledge. Martin Kusch argues that empirical belief can acquire the status of knowledge only by being shared with others, and that all empirical beliefs presuppose social institutions. As a result all knowledge is essentially political. Part III defends some of the controversial premises and consequences of Parts I and II: the community-dependence of normativity, epistemological and semantic relativism, anti-realism, and a social conception of objectivity. Martin Kusch's bold approach to epistemology is a challenge to philosophy and will arouse interest in the wider academic world.
This work investigates whether knowledge should be understood as a social status and a collective possession rather than an individual achievement. Martin Kusch, a philosopher specializing in the social dimensions of knowledge, utilizes a structured philosophical framework to challenge traditional individualistic epistemological models. He argues that empirical belief requires social validation and that the foundations of knowledge are inherently political and institutional in nature.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this text as a significant contribution to social epistemology that challenges standard philosophical assumptions about objectivity and realism. Readers frequently note the high level of academic density and the rigorous, systematic nature of the arguments presented.
Page Count:
303
Publication Date:
2002-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191530662
ISBN-13:
9780191530661
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