
Contents
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1. Meeting the Conditions for Overdetermination 1. Meeting the Conditions for Overdetermination
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2. The Case Against Overdetermination 2. The Case Against Overdetermination
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3. Blocking the Epistemic Argument 3. Blocking the Epistemic Argument
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Cite
Abstract
The overdetermination argument purports to show that we shouldn’t believe in ordinary composites because anything they cause would be systematically overdetermined by their atomic parts. This chapter shows that it is reasonable to accept overdetermination of this sort. It is observed that the real core of the argument is a widely neglected epistemic argument, turning on the claim that we have no perceptual reason to postulate baseballs, insofar as we would have had exactly the same experiences whether or not atoms arranged baseballwise composed baseballs. This chapter responds to the argument by addressing a number of putative defeaters for our perceptual justification for believing in baseballs.
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