
Contents
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1 The Method of Cases 1 The Method of Cases
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Philosophical Intuitions Philosophical Intuitions
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The Method in the Method of Cases The Method in the Method of Cases
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Armchair Philosophy Armchair Philosophy
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2 Experimental Philosophy 2 Experimental Philosophy
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Heterogeneity and the Method of Cases Heterogeneity and the Method of Cases
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Instability and the Method of Cases Instability and the Method of Cases
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Heterogeneity, Instability, and the Limits of Armchair Methods Heterogeneity, Instability, and the Limits of Armchair Methods
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3 Experimental Philosophy and the Method of Cases 3 Experimental Philosophy and the Method of Cases
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Cite
Abstract
In Chapter 1, we set out the broad contours of a problem for the method of cases, in which philosophers typically consider hypothetical scenarios, and report on whether they are or aren’t instances of knowledge, or moral goodness, or some other target philosophical concept. On the one hand, armchair versions of the method of cases presuppose an entitlement to deploy a wide range of case verdicts as philosophical evidence, typically in the absence of any specific empirical evidence that would license our reliance on them. On the other hand, cognitive psychology, in general, and experimental philosophy, in particular, have shown that the human capacity to render these kinds of case verdicts suffers from some substantial shortcomings that we cannot expect to be generally detectable or correctable from the restricted epistemic vantage of the armchair.
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