Region: | Western philosophy |
Era: | Contemporary philosophy |
Richard Fumerton | |
Education: | University of Toronto (B.A.) Brown University (M.A., PhD) |
School Tradition: | Analytic philosophy |
Main Interests: | epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of mind, value theory |
Thesis Title: | Phenomenalism |
Doctoral Advisors: | Roderick Chisholm, Ernest Sosa, J. Van Cleve[1] |
Birth Date: | 7 October 1949 |
Birth Place: | Toronto, Ontario |
Thesis Year: | 1974 |
Richard Anthony Fumerton (born October 7, 1949)[2] is a Canadian American philosopher and professor of philosophy at the University of Iowa with research interests in epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of mind and value theory.[3] [4] He has been cited as an influential expert on the position of "metaepistemological scepticism".[5] He received his B.A. in philosophy from the University of Toronto in 1971 and his M.A. and PhD from Brown University in 1973 and 1974, respectively.[6] He has been the F. Wendell Miller Professor of Philosophy at the University of Iowa since 2003.[7]
Fumerton has argued for a classical internalist form of foundationalism in which foundationally justified beliefs are justified non-inferentially.[8] Specifically, Fumerton believes that for a belief to be non-inferentially justified, it must be justified by direct acquaintance with facts and the correspondence between those facts and the belief in question.[9] Fumerton's foundationalism is classical or "old-fashioned" in that it claims that foundationally justified beliefs are beliefs about one's states of mind rather than beliefs about the external world.[10] Given this fact, Fumerton has argued that we cannot have the philosophical assurance required for knowledge about the external world. He has argued that whilst externalist theories of justification provide non-inferentially justified beliefs about the external world, these justifications are "philosophically unsatisfying" and cannot provide philosophical assurance for beliefs about the external world. Given these arguments, Fumerton thinks that there is no philosophically satisfying account of how we could know about the external world, a view known as "metaepistemological scepticism".[11] He has also argued for a "principle of inferential justification" that states that for a subject S to be justified in believing a proposition P on the basis of another proposition E, S must be justified in believing that E and they must be justified in believing that E makes P probable.
In philosophical inquiry into the nature of rationality, Fumerton has been credited by Richard Foley with formulating a problem that Foley calls "Fumerton's puzzle".[12] [13] A theory of rationality attempts to provide the conditions C under which a belief or decision is rational.[14] Fumerton's puzzle arises when candidate conditions are met, but an agent rationally believes that they are not met. Assuming that the agent believes that C must be met for their belief or decision to be rational, then in this case they would rationally believe that their belief or decision is irrational even though it satisfies the conditions C. When paired with the idea that it is irrational to have a belief or make a decision if one rationally believes that it is irrational, this implies that a belief or decision can be irrational even if C are satisfied. But this means that C are not sufficient conditions for rationality, implying that finding such conditions is impossible. Fumerton's puzzle can also occur when the conditions are not met, but an agent rationally believes that they are. In such a case, the agent would rationally believe that their belief or decision is rational. However, the agent's rational belief that their belief or decision is rational seems sufficient to make them rational even if C is not satisfied. This implies that C are not necessary conditions for a belief or decision to be rational.
Fumerton defended mind-body dualism in his book Knowledge, Thought and the Case for Dualism, published in 2013.[15]
Foley. Richard. 2014. Some Features of Richard Fumerton's Philosophical Views. 6th Annual Orange Beach Epistemology Workshop. University of South Alabama. https://www.southalabama.edu/orangebeachepistemology/pastworkshops.html.