Archive/The Safety Versus Sensitivity Debate Revisited
The Safety Versus Sensitivity Debate Revisited
Duncan Pritchard
17 juillet 2026
en

Abstract

It is widely accepted that there is a modal condition on knowledge. There are two main candidates in the literature: safety and sensitivity. My goal in this paper is to revisit this debate in the context of anti-risk epistemology. This approach is meant to offer an independent way of determining the modal condition on knowledge (i.e., as opposed to simply pitching modal conditions against one another and seeing which one accommodates the wider range of cases). Interestingly, while anti-risk epistemology favors safety over traditional formulations of sensitivity, it also leads to a very specific way of formulating the safety condition on knowledge. Given that sensitivity might also be reformulated along anti-risk lines, a natural question to ask is where this leaves the debate between safety and sensitivity. I will be suggesting that the most plausible anti-risk formulation of sensitivity is equivalent to the corresponding formulation of safety. If that is right, then ultimately the moral to draw from anti-risk epistemology is not that it favors safety over sensitivity but that it leads to a formulation of the anti-risk condition on knowledge whereby this distinction collapses.

Keywords

safetyversussensitivitydebaterevisitedphilosophieswidelyacceptedtheremodalconditionknowledgemaincandidatesliteraturegoalpaperrevisitcontextanti-riskepistemologyapproachmeantoffer
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