Can reflection destroy knowledge? Is it plausible to say that people's sense of social and moral direction can depend on not asking too many questions? Should one always justify conceptual and moral foundations of this world? Do you risk ending up in a situation where the reasons guiding your actions lose their power to guide? By demanding reasons for reasons, can reflection destroy practical knowledge?
I think there can be cases in which reflection can destroy knowledge, yes. Most epistemologists these days are fallibilists, which is to say that one can know something even if what warrants their belief does not guarantee certainty--could be (but is not) mistaken in some way. So one way someone could lose this sort of knowledge would be by reflecting on certain other intuitions most of us have about vulnerability to error. For example, can you really KNOW that something is true if there is even a one in a million chance that you are mistaken in believing that thing? I can easily imagine someone with low enough cognitive self-esteem--"Hey, maybe I'm wrong !!!" or "I'm so stupid, why should I believe that I am getting anything right, even though it really seems in this case I have it right!" and so on--that one could actually talk themselves out of knowing something because one would come up with some reason for thinking they were (or might be) wrong when in fact they had it right all along and...
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