Available Formats
Feelings of Believing: Psychology, History, Phenomenology
By (Author) Ryan Hickerson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
28th February 2020
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Cognition and cognitive psychology
121.6
Hardback
334
Width 160mm, Height 229mm, Spine 30mm
671g
In Feelings of Believing: Psychology, History, Phenomenology, Ryan Hickerson demonstrates that philosophers as diverse as Hume, Descartes, Husserl, and William James all treated believing as feeling. He argues that doxastic sentimentalism, thereby, is considerably more central to modern epistemology than has standardly been recognized. When the empirical psychology of overconfidence and attention is brought to bear on the history of philosophy and the phenomenology of believing, all point toward belief as fundamentally affective. Understanding believing as feeling has the potential to make us better believers, both by encouraging suspicion of unexamined certainties and by focusing attention on credulity. Hickerson argues that believing is typically felt but not given attention by the believer, and he suggests that virtuous believers are those who pay careful attention to their own sentiments-- who attempt to raise their beliefs to the level of judgments.
"Hickerson's Feelings of Believing is an ambitious work, and fulfills these ambitions. It is historically sensitive, but with a modernising eye, while also being empirically informed. It will appeal to a wide variety of scholars." -- Hsueh Qu, National University of Singapore
"This groundbreaking book sets out to assess the prospects for doxastic sentimentalism epistemologically, psychologically, phenomenologically, and historically. Nuanced, subtle and trenchantly argued, Hickersons book breaks new ground in exploring the rich and complex nexus of relationships between cognition and sentiment." -- Wayne Martin, University of Essex
Ryan Hickerson, PhD, teaches philosophy at Western Oregon University.