CORE
🇺🇦
make metadata, not war
Services
Services overview
Explore all CORE services
Access to raw data
API
Dataset
FastSync
Content discovery
Recommender
Discovery
OAI identifiers
OAI Resolver
Managing content
Dashboard
Bespoke contracts
Consultancy services
Support us
Support us
Membership
Sponsorship
Community governance
Advisory Board
Board of supporters
Research network
About
About us
Our mission
Team
Blog
FAQs
Contact us
Knowing things and going places
Authors
Quill R. Kukla
Publication date
1 January 2022
Publisher
Oxford [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
Doi
Cite
Abstract
When I say “I know Sarah,” or “I know Berlin,” what sort of knowledge am I claiming? Such knowledge of a particular is, I claim, not reducible to either propositional knowledge-that or to traditional physical know-how. Mere, bare knowledge by acquaintance also does not capture the kind of knowledge being claimed here. Using knowledge of a place as my central example, I argue that this kind of knowledge-of, or “objectual knowledge” as it is sometimes called, is of a distinctive epistemological sort. It is a genre of inherently first-personal aesthetic knowledge, but it also, like know-how, involves active skill. I end by exploring a couple of classic problems in aesthetic epistemology, applied to the case of knowledge-of as active aesthetic knowledge. © 2022 The Authors. European Journal of Philosophy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Similar works
Full text
Open in the Core reader
Download PDF
Available Versions
Institutionelles Repositorium der Leibniz Universität Hannover
See this paper in CORE
Go to the repository landing page
Download from data provider
oai:www.repo.uni-hannover.de:1...
Last time updated on 14/11/2022