2016, Acta Analytica
Your article is protected by copyright and all rights are held exclusively by Springer Science +Business Media Dordrecht. This e-offprint is for personal use only and shall not be selfarchived in electronic repositories. If you wish to self-archive your article, please use the accepted manuscript version for posting on your own website. You may further deposit the accepted manuscript version in any repository, provided it is only made publicly available 12 months after official publication or later and provided acknowledgement is given to the original source of publication and a link is inserted to the published article on Springer's website. The link must be accompanied by the following text: "The final publication is available at link.springer.com". Abstract In this paper, I present and extend Neta's (Philosophy and Phenomenological Research LXXV (1): 180-187 2007) counter-example against interest-relative invariantism (IRI hereafter). I first outline IRI, briefly explaining the content of the view and illustrating how it diverges from more classical approaches to epistemology. I then distinguish between two forms the view can take: a strong and a moderate formulation. After this, I argue that Neta's counter-example only succeeds at undermining the strongest variant, leaving the weaker counterpart unscathed. After all of this is accomplished, I extend Neta-style counter-examples to undermine a more moderate variant. I close the paper by considering and responding to several objections. Keywords Pragmatic encroachment . Interest-relative invarianism . Neta Stanley (2008), Fantl and McGrath (2009), Hawthorne , and others have put forth a novel view in epistemology sometimes called Binterest-relative invariantism.Î nterest-relative invariantism (IRI hereafter) is the view that whether S knows that p partially depends on what is at stake for S. If IRI is correct, then our understanding of knowledge requires a radical alteration, for what turns a true belief into knowledge requires both traditional and non-traditional epistemic constraints. IRI can be contrasted with a more classical approach to epistemology, whereby only traditional epistemic features can turn a true belief into knowledge (features such as justification, truth, belief, and a non-Gettier condition). While classical epistemologists disagree on which features are relevant, or even the proper way to understand them, there is a consensus that non-traditional epistemic features play no significant role in determining whether a true belief is an instance of knowledge.