Available Formats
Virtue Epistemology: Motivation and Knowledge
By (Author) Dr Stephen Napier
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
1st September 2008
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
121
Hardback
184
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Contemporary epistemology debates have largely been occupied with formulating a definition of knowledge that is immune to any counterexample. To date, no definition has been able to escape unscathed.
Moving away from debates about definitions, Virtue Epistemology shows what conditions are essential for knowledge and applies this account to different domains. It proposes that agents must be motivated correctly to acquire knowledge, even in the case of perception.
Stephen Napier examines closely the empirical research in cognitive science and moral psychology to build an account of knowledge wherein an agent must perform acts of virtue in order to get knowledge. In so doing, Napier provides answers to two key questions: 'what is knowledge' and 'how do we get it'
Mention -Book News, February 2009
Mention -Chronicle of Higher Education, February 13, 2009
"[Napier's book] not only brings conceptual clarity to the question of what knowledge is, but also promises practical guidance for one's cognitive life ... It should be of keen interest not only to those doing research in the area, but also in the classroom as a clear, well-written text that brings the important differences between divergent strands of contemporary virtue epistemology into critical focus." - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
Stephen Napier has a PhD in Philosophy from Saint Louis University, USA, and was previously Professor of Ethics at Belmont University and Fellow in Medical Ethics at St Thomas Hospital, Nashville. He is currently a full-time ethicist for the National Catholic Bioethics Center in Philadelphia.