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Comparing Arguments and Viewpoints in Unit 4 Set Texts

Philosophy
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Comparing Arguments and Viewpoints in Unit 4 Set Texts

Philosophy
01 May 2026

Comparing Arguments and Viewpoints in Unit 4 Set Texts

Framework for Comparative Analysis

Comparing viewpoints in Unit 4 requires identifying genuine points of agreement and disagreement on the epistemological questions of belief, testimony, expertise, and responsibility. As with Unit 3, a good comparison moves below the surface to identify structural and foundational differences.


Hume vs. Reid: The Basis for Trusting Testimony

Agreement

  • Both accept that testimony is a major source of our beliefs about the world
  • Both accept that testimony can be unreliable and that some critical scrutiny is warranted
  • Both are empiricists in a broad sense — concerned with actual epistemic practice

Disagreement

Dimension Hume Reid
Default attitude to testimony Sceptical — trust must be earned through evidence of past reliability Credulous — trust is the default; doubt requires specific reasons
Justification strategy Reductionist — testimony’s credibility derives from experience of its reliability Anti-reductionist — testimony is a basic source of knowledge, not reducible to experience
Epistemic starting point Suspicion — we assess testimony against our own experience Trust — we begin by accepting, then revise when we encounter specific defeaters

Deeper Divergence

Hume’s reductionism about testimony is an expression of his broader empiricism: all knowledge derives from experience, so testimony must ultimately be grounded in experiential evidence of its reliability. Reid’s anti-reductionism reflects a commitment to common sense as the proper starting point for epistemology — our natural dispositions to believe are not guilty until proven innocent.

VCAA FOCUS: This comparison appears frequently. Know that the debate is not merely about how much to trust testimony but about the epistemological status of testimony as a source of knowledge.


Clifford vs. James: Epistemic Responsibility

Agreement

  • Both accept that beliefs have consequences and are therefore subject to evaluation
  • Both accept that some epistemic standards apply to belief formation
  • Both are engaging with the same set of problematic cases — belief under uncertainty

Disagreement

Dimension Clifford James
Standard for belief Never believe without sufficient evidence In genuine options, may believe without decisive evidence
Type of failure Believing without evidence is always wrong Refusing to believe in genuine options is also a failure
Role of consequences Bad consequences of negligent belief confirm its wrongness Good consequences of committed belief can justify it
Scope of epistemic duty Strictly evidentialist — evidence is the only valid ground Pragmatist — practical necessity can ground belief in certain cases

Key Point of Comparison

Clifford and James agree that epistemic negligence is a moral failure. They disagree about what negligence consists of. For Clifford, it is always negligent to believe without evidence; for James, it can be negligent to withhold belief when the evidence is unavailable but the stakes are high and the option is genuine.

A nuanced comparative critique: James’s position is sometimes misread as endorsing wishful thinking. But he explicitly limits his view to genuine options — cases where the choice is forced, live, and momentous. This constraint narrows his disagreement with Clifford considerably.


Fricker vs. Traditional Epistemology: The Epistemic Justice Perspective

Agreement with Traditional Epistemology

  • Both accept that credibility assessment is central to the epistemic practice of accepting testimony
  • Both accept that reasoning and evidence play important roles in belief justification

Disagreement

Dimension Traditional Epistemology Fricker’s Epistemic Justice
Focus Individual cognitive processes Social and structural dimensions of knowing
Key question When is a belief justified? Who gets to count as a knower?
Credibility Assigned based on objective indicators of competence Shaped by identity prejudices — can be systematically biased
Epistemic community Largely background assumption A site of potential injustice, requiring critical scrutiny

Deeper Comparison

Fricker’s contribution is to socialise epistemology — to show that the practices through which we assess, transmit, and build knowledge are not merely cognitive but social and political. Traditional epistemology focused on the individual knower; Fricker shows that the social context of knowing is itself epistemologically significant.

Comparative critique: Traditional epistemology is not wrong so much as incomplete. It misses the social dimensions of credibility that Fricker highlights. A fully adequate epistemology must account for both the individual and social conditions of knowledge.


Conciliationists vs. Steadfast Views on Peer Disagreement

Dimension Conciliationist (Feldman) Steadfast (Kelly)
Response to peer disagreement Move toward peer’s view; may suspend judgment Maintain position if evidence supports it
Status of disagreement Evidence that you may have erred A puzzle, but not a defeater for your own justified belief
Epistemic humility Required — disagreement shows you are fallible Acknowledged, but doesn’t require abandoning position
Risk Sycophancy — abandoning justified positions under social pressure Stubbornness — ignoring legitimate counter-evidence

EXAM TIP: For each comparison, know: (1) one genuine agreement, (2) the surface disagreement, (3) the deeper structural divergence. Practice stating each in 2–3 sentences.

STUDY HINT: Create a two-column comparison table for each pair of thinkers. Then write a paragraph synthesising the table — identifying which comparison point is most philosophically significant.

COMMON MISTAKE: Students often conflate Hume’s reductionism about testimony with general scepticism. Hume is not saying we should never trust testimony — he is saying trust must be earned through accumulated experience of reliability. This is a more nuanced position than flat scepticism.

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