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AN ANALYSIS OF THE CENTRALITY OF INTUITION TALK IN THE DISCUSSION ON TASTE DISAGREEMENTS
Indexado
WoS WOS:000743208200005
Scopus SCOPUS_ID:85126611018
DOI 10.14394/FILNAU.2021.0008
Año 2021
Tipo artículo de investigación

Citas Totales

Autores Afiliación Chile

Instituciones Chile

% Participación
Internacional

Autores
Afiliación Extranjera

Instituciones
Extranjeras


Abstract



According to Cappelen (2012), analytic philosophers have traditionally used two arguments to defend the role of intuitions in philosophy. On the one hand, The Argument from Philosophical Practice claims that analytic philosophers rely on intuitions when defending their theories. On the other hand, The Argument from Intuition Talk contends that intuitions must play a prominent role in analytic philosophy because analytic philosophers use intuition talk profusely. Cappelen (2012) identifies three questions to be considered when assessing the Argument from Intuition Talk: a quantitative question, a centrality question, and an interpretative question. The available studies have mainly focused on the quantitative and interpretative questions. In this paper, I examine the centrality question, taking as a case study the literature on taste disagreements - a topic that has received significant attention in the philosophy of language in the last fifteen years. To this end, I first build a corpus with the most relevant works in the area and then examine the centrality of intuition talk. The results show that the use of intuition talk is central in the literature on taste disagreements, and that intuitions are taken as evidence in favor of a given theory if the theory can account for them.

Revista



Revista ISSN
Filozofia Nauki 1230-6894

Métricas Externas



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Disciplinas de Investigación



WOS
Philosophy
Scopus
Philosophy
History And Philosophy Of Science
SciELO
Sin Disciplinas

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Publicaciones WoS (Ediciones: ISSHP, ISTP, AHCI, SSCI, SCI), Scopus, SciELO Chile.

Colaboración Institucional



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Autores - Afiliación



Ord. Autor Género Institución - País
1 Bordonaba-Plou, David Hombre Universidad de Valparaíso - Chile
UNIV GRANADA - España

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Financiamiento



Fuente
Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico
Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica
CONICYT/FONDECYT/POSTDOCTORADO

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Agradecimientos



Agradecimiento
** This article has partly been elaborated in the framework of the project A Computational Dynamic Analysis of Public Debates on Politics, Aesthetics and Taste, No 3180096 of FONDECYT postdoctoral competition 2018, funded by CONICYT/FONDECYT/POSTDOCTORADO/No Proyecto 3180096. I am grateful to two anonymous referees for their invaluable comments, and to the audiences of the Seminario de Filosofia y Matematicas (Universidad de Valparaiso, Chile) and the GLiF Seminars (Universidad Pompeu Fabra, Spain), where I presented previous versions of this work.
* Universidad de Valparaíso, Chile; member of the Centro de Estudios en Filosofía, Lógica y Epistemología from the Universidad de Valparaíso (Chile), and the FiloLab excellence group from the Universidad de Granada (Spain); e-mail: davidbordonaba@gmail.com; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0788-9733. ** This article has partly been elaborated in the framework of the project A Computational Dynamic Analysis of Public Debates on Politics, Aesthetics and Taste, No 3180096 of FONDECYT postdoctoral competition 2018, funded by CONICYT / FONDECYT / POST-DOCTORADO / No Proyecto 3180096. I am grateful to two anonymous referees for their invaluable comments, and to the audiences of the Seminario de Filosofía y Matemáticas (Universidad de Valparaíso, Chile) and the GLiF Seminars (Universidad Pompeu Fabra, Spain), where I presented previous versions of this work.

Muestra la fuente de financiamiento declarada en la publicación.