ভূমিকা
However, suppose it can be show that the true agnostic has a good chance of getting the truth. There will still be a sort of leftover outsider scepticism. The outsider who is not an agnostic might still regard philosophy as unreliable, as having too great a tendency to allow people to rationalize their prior beliefs, etc. [^4] Questions that were once thought to be philosophical have a tendency to become questions for the social or natural sciences.
The border between philosophical and nonphilosophical questions is fuzzy. However, without saying how to make the distinction, I will assume there is something like a core of questions that we reasonably can expect to remain part of philosophy. [^5] T. S. Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996), pp. 136-[^138]: [^6] Wilbur M. Urban, ‘Progress in Philosophy in the Last Quarter Century’, The Philosophical Review 35:2 (1926), pp.
93-[^123]: [^7] This phrase comes from Toni Vogel Carey, ‘Is Philosophy Progressive’, Philosophy Now 59 (2007), accessed online (3/15/07) at http://www.philosophynow.org/issue59/59carey.html [^8] E.g., Robert Audi, The Good in the Right, (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004). [^9] See Richard Feldman, ‘Reasonable Religious Disagreements’, in Louise Antony.
ed., Philosophers Without Gods , (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007); Richard Feldman, ‘Epistemological Puzzles about Disagreement’, in Stephen Hetherington (ed.), Epistemology Futures (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006). [^10] Adam Elga, ‘Reflection and Disagreement’, Noûs 41 (2007), pp.