EPISTEME publishes
articles on the social dimensions of knowledge from
the perspective of philosophical epistemology and related
social sciences (e.g., economics, political theory,
information science). It focuses on theoretical work,
but also welcomes policy-oriented discussions, i.e.,
applications to contemporary society and its institutions.
It does not publish straightforward empirical studies
or case studies. The principal style is that of analytical
philosophy, but rigorous approaches of other kinds are
appropriate so long as they remain accessible to an
interdisciplinary audience. For a detailed overview
that reflects the Journal's conception of the scope
and contours of social epistemology, see Alvin Goldman's
article "Social
Epistemology" to be found in The
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Topics of interest
to the journal include, but are not limited to:
Testimony
Judgment aggregation
Juries and expert
panels
Social models
of science
Knowledge and
democracy
Analytical feminist
epistemology
Collective belief,
group rationality
Social applications
of Bayesian inference
Incentives and
interests in an epistemic context
Intellectual
trust and comparative assignments of trustworthiness
Epistemological
relativism, objectivism, contextualism, communitarianism
How epistemic
goals, norms or desiderata (e.g., knowledge, truth,
warrant, justification, rationality, consensus) are
promoted or impeded by various social practices
Patterns, institutions
and networks of communication (dialogue and argumentation,
the Internet, education, the press, research dissemination,
epidemiology of ideas, distributed cognition)