| Social epistemology: essential readings / ed. by A.I.Goldman, D.Whitcomb. - Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2011. - ix, 357 p.: ill. - Ind.: p.351-357. - ISBN 978-0-19-533461-6; ISBN 978-0-19-533453-1
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Introduction ................................................. 3
Dennis Whitcomb
I. CONCEPTIONS OF SOCIAL EPISTEMOLOGY
1 A Guide to Social Epistemology .............................. 11
Alvin I. Goldman
2 Epistemic Relativism Defended ............................... 38
Paul Boghossian
3 Rational Authority and Social Power: Towards a Truly
Social Epistemology ......................................... 54
Miranda Fricker
II. TRUST IN TESTIMONY AND EXPERTS
4 Testimony: Acquiring Knowledge from Others .................. 71
Jennifer Lackey
5 "If That Were True I Would Have Heard about It by Now" ...... 92
Sanford C. Goldberg
6 Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust? ...................... 109
Alvin I. Goldman
III. REASONABLE PEER DISAGREEMENT
7 Reasonable Religious Disagreements ......................... 137
Richard Feldman
8 Reflection and Disagreement ................................ 158
Adam Elga
9 Peer Disagreement and Higher Order Evidence ................ 183
Thomas Kelly
IV. JUDGMENT AGGREGATION
10 Group Knowledge and Group Rationality: A Judgment
Aggregation Perspective .................................... 221
Christian List
11 Groups with Minds of Their Own ............................. 242
Philip Pettit
V. SYSTEMS DESIGN
12 Thinking about Error in the Law ............................ 271
Larry Laudan
13 Wikipistemology ............................................ 297
Don Fallis
14 Deliberating Groups versus Prediction Markets (or Hayek's
Challenge to Habermas) ..................................... 314
Cass R. Sunstein
15 The Communication Structure of Epistemic Communities ....... 338
Kevin J.S. Zollman
Index ...................................................... 351
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