The question of a priori (i.e., Can an adequate epistemology be developed without appeal to a non-empirical source of justification?) is a core issue running throughout the history of philosophy, and recent decades have seen some provocative and potentially epochal work on the issue. One primary aim of this book is to make some contributions toward a clear-headed evaluation of the upshot of these developments. It argues that the notion of the constitutive a priori provides the best means, all things considered, of accommodating these recent developments into a coherent, compelling view.
The constitutive a priori is most commonly known as a position within the philosophy of science, the guiding idea being that one of Kant’s signature moves provides the means to incorporate unforeseen drastic shocks into existing theory.
This books shows that this notion of the constitutive a priori provides not merely a satisfactory epistemological framework, but, further, a compelling way to accommodate and integrate some of the most significant lessons learned in 20th century philosophy. Its distinctive original contribution lies in the case it builds for taking this constitutive a priori orientation as a good means of integrating and consolidating certain epochal insights of Wittgenstein, Carnap, Quine, Kripke, and Kaplan.