DOI: 10.1111/phpr.13051 ISSN: 0031-8205

Knowledge‐by‐Acquaintance First

Uriah Kriegel
  • History and Philosophy of Science
  • Philosophy

Abstract

Bertrand Russell's epistemology had the interesting structural feature that it made propositional knowledge (“S knows that p”) asymmetrically dependent upon what Russell called knowledge by acquaintance. On this view, a subject lacking any knowledge by acquaintance would be unable to know that p for any p. This is something that virtually nobody has defended since Russell, and in this paper I initiate a sympathetic reconsideration.