Javascript must be enabled to continue!
ON NORMATIVITY AND EPISTEMIC INTUITIONS: FAILURE OF REPLICATION
View through CrossRef
AbstractThe field of experimental philosophy has received considerable attention, essentially for producing results that seem highly counter-intuitive and at the same time question some of the fundamental methods used in philosophy. One of the earlier influential papers that gave rise to the experimental philosophy movement titled ‘Normativity and Epistemic Intuitions’ by Jonathan M. Weinberg, Shaun Nichols and Stephen Stich (2001), reported that respondents displayed different epistemic intuitions depending on their ethnic background as well as socioeconomic status. These findings, if robust, would have important implications for philosophical methodology in general and epistemology in particular. Because of the important implication of its findings, Weinberget al. (2001) has been very influential – currently with more than four hundred citations – and the subject of extensive debate. Despite the paper's significance and despite all the debates this paper has generated, there has not been a replication attempt of its experiments. We collected data from four different sources (two on-line and two in-person) to replicate the experiments. Despite several different data sets and in various cases larger sample sizes, we failed to detect significant differences between the above-mentioned groups. Our results suggest that epistemic intuitions are more uniform across ethnic and socioeconomic groups than Weinberget al. (2001) indicates. Given our data, we believe that the notion of differences in epistemic intuitions among different ethnic and socioeconomic groups advanced by Weinberget al. (2001) and accepted by many researchers needs to be corrected.
Title: ON NORMATIVITY AND EPISTEMIC INTUITIONS: FAILURE OF REPLICATION
Description:
AbstractThe field of experimental philosophy has received considerable attention, essentially for producing results that seem highly counter-intuitive and at the same time question some of the fundamental methods used in philosophy.
One of the earlier influential papers that gave rise to the experimental philosophy movement titled ‘Normativity and Epistemic Intuitions’ by Jonathan M.
Weinberg, Shaun Nichols and Stephen Stich (2001), reported that respondents displayed different epistemic intuitions depending on their ethnic background as well as socioeconomic status.
These findings, if robust, would have important implications for philosophical methodology in general and epistemology in particular.
Because of the important implication of its findings, Weinberget al.
(2001) has been very influential – currently with more than four hundred citations – and the subject of extensive debate.
Despite the paper's significance and despite all the debates this paper has generated, there has not been a replication attempt of its experiments.
We collected data from four different sources (two on-line and two in-person) to replicate the experiments.
Despite several different data sets and in various cases larger sample sizes, we failed to detect significant differences between the above-mentioned groups.
Our results suggest that epistemic intuitions are more uniform across ethnic and socioeconomic groups than Weinberget al.
(2001) indicates.
Given our data, we believe that the notion of differences in epistemic intuitions among different ethnic and socioeconomic groups advanced by Weinberget al.
(2001) and accepted by many researchers needs to be corrected.
Related Results
Epistemic Injustice or Epistemic Oppression?
Epistemic Injustice or Epistemic Oppression?
The concepts of epistemic injustice and epistemic oppression both aim to track obstacles to epistemic agencyーi.e., forms of epistemic exclusionーthat are undue and persistent. Indee...
The Priority Question and Its Solutions: Debates About Political Normativity
The Priority Question and Its Solutions: Debates About Political Normativity
Kreutz explicitly categorises the debates about political normativity into two questions: the distinctness question (Q1), which asks whether there is distinctively political normat...
Epistemic Injustice
Epistemic Injustice
<p>“Epistemic injustice” is a fairly new concept in philosophy, which, loosely speaking, describes a kind of injustice that occurs at the intersection of structures of the so...
Temas Epistêmicos, não Epistêmicos no Ensino
Temas Epistêmicos, não Epistêmicos no Ensino
Resumo
A Epistemologia da Ciência é um campo de estudo que permite analisar o desenvolvimento da ciência em uma postura dialética, que qualifica as questões internas à Ciência, rel...
The Epistemic Innocence of Irrational Beliefs
The Epistemic Innocence of Irrational Beliefs
Abstract
Ideally, we would have beliefs that satisfy norms of truth and rationality, as well as fostering the acquisition, retention and use of other relevant inform...
ANALISIS KUALITAS AIR LINDI DI TPA LEMPENI KABUPATEN LUMAJANG
ANALISIS KUALITAS AIR LINDI DI TPA LEMPENI KABUPATEN LUMAJANG
Abstract
The problem of waste management in landfills which is not resolved will be a threat to the environment and humans. The main cause of water resources pollution in landfil...
Investigating and developing undergraduate students' representational competence in physics in the context of epistemic practices of science
Investigating and developing undergraduate students' representational competence in physics in the context of epistemic practices of science
This study aimed to understand the varied ways in which undergraduate students demonstrate representational competence in physics in the context of epistemic practices, how these v...
Single‐Molecule Optical Replication Mapping (ORM) Suggests Human Replication Timing is Regulated by Stochastic Initiation
Single‐Molecule Optical Replication Mapping (ORM) Suggests Human Replication Timing is Regulated by Stochastic Initiation
DNA replication timing is regulated by the timing of initiation across the genome. However, there is no consensus as to how initiation timing is regulated. Deterministic models con...

