Transparency belongs to action, not to belief

Article

Transparency belongs to action, not to belief

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 37 , issue 2 , 2018 , pages: 217–228
DOI: 10.1080/02580136.2018.1470147
Author(s): Nikolai Viedge Department of Philosophy, South Africa

Abstract

In setting out their normative account of the truth-belief relationship, Nishi Shah and David Velleman make two claims about a feature of doxastic deliberation they call transparency. Firstly, transparency is a feature only of doxastic deliberation. Secondly, teleological theories of the truth-belief relationship cannot account for both transparency and the non-evidential factors present in instances of motivated belief. Therefore, they argue, we should abandon teleological accounts in favour of a normative one, which is able to make sense of both descriptive features of belief. I argue that if their first claim about transparency is correct, then their second is a non sequitur: if transparency is a feature only of doxastic deliberation, then it is described and explained in terms of action rather than of belief. Since theories of belief do not have to account for features of action, teleological accounts cannot be undermined by their inability to explain transparency.

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