Publication | Open Access
UNDERSTANDING, GRASPING AND LUCK
52
Citations
27
References
2013
Year
Lucky UnderstandingBehavioral Decision MakingCognitionEpistemic LogicBehavioral Game TheoryGrasping And LuckSocial SciencesSituational ReasoningCommonsense KnowledgeSuperstition StudiesReliable Explanatory EvaluationDecision TheoryExplanatory KnowledgeCognitive ScienceReasoning About ActionReasoningNatural SciencesKnowledge ReasoningEpistemologyPhilosophical Inquiry
Abstract Recently, it has been debated as to whether understanding is a species of explanatory knowledge. Those who deny this claim frequently argue that understanding, unlike knowledge, can be lucky. In this paper I argue that current arguments do not support this alleged compatibility between understanding and epistemic luck. First, I argue that understanding requires reliable explanatory evaluation, yet the putative examples of lucky understanding underspecify the extent to which subjects possess this ability. In the course of defending this claim, I also provide a new account of the kind of ‘grasping’ taken to be central to understanding. Second, I show that putative examples of lucky understanding unwittingly deploy a kind of luck that is compatible with knowledge. Finally, appealing to a number of works on explanation and its attendant epistemology, I argue that alleged instances of lucky understanding that overcome these two obstacles will invariably violate certain norms of explanatory inquiry – our paradigmatic understanding-oriented practice. By contrast, knowledge of the same information is immune to these criticisms. Consequently, if understanding is environmentally lucky, it is always inferior to the understanding that a corresponding case of knowledge would provide.
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