1st Edition

The Sceptical Challenge

By Ruth Weintraub Copyright 1997

    Do we really know the things we think we know? Are any of our beliefs reasonable? Scepticism gives a pessimistic reply to these important epistemological questions - we don't know anything; none of our beliefs are reasonable. But can such a seemingly paradoxical claim be more than an intellectual curiousity? And if it is, can it be refuted? Ruth Weintraub answers yes to both these questions.
    The sceptical challenge is a formidable one, and should be confronted, not dismissed. The theoretical and practical difficulties it presents - in that the sceptical life cannot be lived, and the doctrine seems self-defeating - are in fact superficial, according to Ruth Weintraub. Her study looks at the sceptical arguments of Descartes, Hume and the ancient Greek sceptic, Sextus Empiricus. The author argues that by drawing on philosophy, rather than science, the sceptical challenge can be answered.
    The Sceptical Challenge is a bold and original response to scepticism; it represents a new way of looking at the field for philosophers of epistemology.

    Introduction. 1. Knowledge, Justification and Truth 2. The Sceptical Life 3. The Challenge 4. The Response 5. Descartes' Sceptical Challenge 6. Inductive Scepticism 7. Scepticism and the Structure of Justification 8. Inductive Scepticism Revisited 9. Transcendent Scepticism and Inference to the Best Explanation 10. The Demon Argument Revisited 11. The Dream Argument Revisited.

    Biography

    Ruth Weintraub