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Right. Can you guess why I'm agreeing with you all the while still holding to my stance?But we're back to that same question of certitude, which is different from foundationalism. Foundationalism pertains to structure, not certitude. An uncertain person is not by that fact a non-foundationalist. Foundationalism does implicate certitude in various ways given that the nature of argumentation moves from the more certain to the less certain, but part of Nagel's point is that to give up Descartes' axiom(s) is not to give up foundationalism.
I know who Nagel is. I've read some of him already in the past. The problem here is, based on my angle of philosophy, or rather, THAT of the various sources informing my viewpoint, is that to say that 'any' body of knowledge will end up being foundationalist doesn't say a whole lot about guaranteeing the level of "Justified True Belief."Nagel is thinking of hard science, but also things like logic, ethics, language, and perhaps even aesthetics. I take it that the logical conclusion of this idea is that any structured body of knowledge will ultimately be foundationalist.
That's a good question. For me, Epistemology isn't fully decided upon which of several positions or frameworks one might choose to label his/her approach to beliefs and truth (or ultimately "knowledge," really).I suppose the question is: What is the alternative to foundationalism for Christian theology or any other body of knowledge?
Of course you can find in in Descartes, but when he ends up applying his Meditations, he opens himself up to critique where Christianity is concerned. Pascal saw that, but didn't unfortunately live long enough to detail it. Others after him have, though.The base metaphor here is mathematics, and you can find it in Descartes and Plato as well as many others.
When I studied epistemology we focused heavily on Laurence BonJour, a dyed in the wool coherentist who eventually jumped ship and embraced foundationalism.
When I studied epistemology, it covered a wide spectrum of competing systems and theories. It wasn't focused upon Coherentism and Foundationalism. Obviously what works in Engineering isn't what's working in Theology.
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