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'''Reliabilism''' is a family of theories in [[epistemology]] that ground epistemic justification — and in some versions, knowledge itself — in the reliability of the cognitive processes that produce beliefs. Where traditional accounts of [[Justified True Belief|justified true belief]] ask whether the agent has ''reasons'' for a belief, reliabilism asks whether the cognitive mechanism that generated the belief is the kind of mechanism that typically produces true beliefs. A belief formed by a reliable process is justified; a belief formed by an unreliable process is not, regardless of whether the agent can articulate why.
'''Reliabilism''' is a family of positions in [[Epistemology|epistemology]] holding that what makes a belief justified is not the believer's access to reasons or evidence, but the reliability of the cognitive process that produced the belief. A belief is epistemically justified if it is the output of a process that tends, across a wide range of circumstances, to produce true beliefs. The locus classicus is Alvin Goldman's 1979 paper "What Is Justified Belief?" which reformulated justification in terms of '''belief-forming processes''' rather than the internal states of the believer.


The canonical formulation is Alvin Goldman's process reliabilism (1979): a belief B is justified if and only if it is produced by a cognitive process that tends to produce true beliefs across the relevant range of conditions. Perception, memory, and deductive inference count as reliable; wishful thinking, horoscope-reading, and the [[Gambler's Fallacy|gambler's fallacy]] do not.
Reliabilism emerged as a response to internalist epistemology — the tradition, running from Descartes through the post-Gettier literature, that demanded a believer have access to the factors that justify their beliefs. Internalism makes justification dependent on what the believer can reflect on; reliabilism insists that epistemic success depends on how the world is structured relative to the believer's cognitive apparatus, not on the believer's introspective self-assessment.


== Core Versions ==
== Process Reliabilism ==


'''Process reliabilism''' (Goldman 1979, 1986) is the foundational version. Justification tracks the truth-conduciveness of the psychological process — pattern recognition, analogical reasoning, logical inference — not the content of the belief or the agent's reflective access to it. This makes reliabilism an ''externalist'' theory: the justifying condition (process reliability) need not be accessible to the believer. An agent can have a justified belief without knowing why it is justified.
The core thesis of '''process reliabilism''' (Goldman's canonical version) is:


'''Indicator reliabilism''' (Alston 1988) shifts focus from cognitive processes to epistemic indicators internal states that reliably correlate with truth. A perceptual experience of a red surface is an indicator of there being a red surface; the justification of ''there is a red surface'' derives from the reliability of that indicator relation.
: A belief B is justified if and only if B is produced by a cognitive process that is '''reliable''' — that is, a process that, in the circumstances of its operation, produces a sufficiently high proportion of true beliefs.


'''Virtue reliabilism''' (Sosa 1991, Greco 2010) merges reliabilism with virtue epistemology. What justifies a belief is not merely that it was produced by ''a'' reliable process, but that it was produced by a reliable ''cognitive virtue'' of the agent a stable, integrated epistemic disposition. This version aims to credit the agent rather than just the mechanism, addressing the intuition that justified belief is an achievement.
Vision, in good lighting, is reliable. Wishful thinking is not. Perception, careful inference, and calibrated testimony from trustworthy sources tend to produce truth; superstition, motivated reasoning, and bias-distorted inference tend to produce falsehood. Reliabilism codifies this intuition: being justified is being epistemically well-positioned, and being epistemically well-positioned is having one's beliefs produced by truth-tracking mechanisms.
 
'''Social reliabilism''' extends this framework: testimony-based belief is justified when the social network of information transmission is reliable when sources are accurate, channels uncorrupted, and aggregation mechanisms sound. This extension has become important in [[Social Epistemology|social epistemology]] and [[Collective Intelligence|collective intelligence]] research.


== The Generality Problem ==
== The Generality Problem ==


The most persistent technical objection to reliabilism is the '''generality problem''' (Conee and Feldman 1998): cognitive process types can be described at different levels of generality, and the reliability of a process type depends entirely on which description is chosen. A belief formed by ''visual perception'' is reliable at one grain; a belief formed by ''visual perception in low light at 20 meters'' may not be. There is no principled, non-arbitrary way to determine which description of a process is the ''relevant'' one for assessing reliability.
The most pressing objection to reliabilism is the '''generality problem''': belief-forming processes can be individuated at many levels of abstraction, and the reliability verdict depends on which level is selected.
 
Consider the belief that a particular bird is a robin. This belief might be produced by:
* ''Vision in good light'' — highly reliable
* ''Identification of small red-breasted birds in March'' — less reliable (confusable with other species)
* ''Visual identification under emotional excitement'' — unreliable


Reliabilists have proposed solutions — causal individuation, the processes the agent's cognitive architecture actually runs — but none has achieved consensus. The generality problem is not merely a technical puzzle; it reveals that ''reliability'' is a relation, not a property, and its two relata (the process and its reference class) are both underdetermined by the theory.
These are different individuations of the same process instance. Reliabilism requires a principled way to select the right level of description, and no principled solution has achieved consensus. The problem is not merely technical: it reflects a genuine difficulty in what it means for a cognitive process to be typed as the same process across different instances.


== The New Evil Demon Problem ==
== The New Evil Demon Problem ==


[[Descartes]] introduced the evil demon to challenge foundationalism. Reliabilism encounters its own version: if an agent is a perfect physical duplicate of a well-functioning human being but is deceived by a demon so that their reliable-seeming processes produce systematically false beliefs, reliabilist accounts deny that their beliefs are justified. Yet intuitively, the deceived agent is doing everything right responding correctly to their evidence, reasoning coherently, forming beliefs in the same way the undeceived agent does.
A deeper objection: reliabilism seems to misplace epistemic value. Imagine two believers, one in the actual world and one in an [[Skeptical Scenarios|evil demon scenario]], with introspectively identical cognitive states. The actual-world believer's perception is reliable; the demon victim's is not. Reliabilism says only the actual-world believer is justified. But intuitively, both believers are doing equally well epistemically they are both being as careful, responsive to evidence, and reflective as they can be.


This suggests that reliabilism captures something real — the connection between truth and justification but misplaces the justificatory condition. What matters for justification, the objection runs, is not whether the process ''is'' reliable in the actual world but whether the agent is ''responding to their evidence'' appropriately. This is the intuition that drives [[internalism]] in epistemology — the view that justifying conditions must be accessible to the agent.
This objection targets what Goldman calls the "internalist intuition": that justification must supervene on the believer's internal states, not on external facts about how their cognitive processes hook up to the world. Reliabilists respond in different ways some bite the bullet (yes, the demon victim is unjustified and we should revise the intuition), some develop '''weak internalist''' variants that require the believer's process to be reliable from the believer's perspective.


== Reliabilism and Systems ==
== The Pragmatist Assessment ==


Reliabilism's significance extends beyond individual cognition. Institutional epistemologists (Goldman 1999; Anderson 2011) have applied reliabilist frameworks to collective knowledge-producing systems: scientific peer review, prediction markets, legal testimony standards, and [[information aggregation]] mechanisms. In this extended sense, the question is not whether an individual's process is reliable but whether a system's process its method of aggregating, filtering, and validating beliefs — reliably tracks truth.
Reliabilism's central insight is correct and important: epistemic evaluation is fundamentally tied to success at producing truth, not to adherence to rules of evidence that the believer takes themselves to be following. A method that works that reliably produces true beliefs — is epistemically valuable independent of whether the believer can articulate why it works.


This systems-level application is where reliabilism does its most useful work. Individual cognitive reliability is nearly impossible to measure directly; system-level reliability is at least in principle empirically tractable. Prediction markets can be back-tested. Peer review can be examined for reproducibility. Legal standards of evidence can be evaluated against conviction rates and exoneration records. The [[Scientific Method]] is, in this light, reliabilism operationalized at institutional scale.
The pragmatist tradition anticipated this: [[Charles Sanders Peirce|Peirce]]'s account of inquiry as doubt-resolution toward stable belief, and [[John Dewey|Dewey]]'s insistence that knowing is a kind of skilled doing, both imply that epistemic success is a matter of reliable engagement with the world, not conformity to internally accessible norms.


== Significance ==
What reliabilism underweights is the role of '''reflective equilibrium''' in epistemic practice. The best epistemic agents are not merely reliable; they can explain why their methods are reliable, revise them when evidence suggests unreliability, and teach them to others. A cognitive process that produces true beliefs but cannot be made transparent enough to transfer, criticize, or improve is reliable in a sense that falls short of genuine epistemic mastery. [[Epistemology|Epistemology]] needs both dimensions: the reliabilist's insistence that truth-tracking is the goal, and the internalist's insistence that understanding why one's methods work is part of what it means to know.


Reliabilism is the dominant externalist theory of justification in contemporary analytic epistemology. It successfully explains why perception and deductive inference justify while superstition does not — not because the agent has superior reasons, but because the mechanisms have superior truth-track records. Its failure to resolve the generality problem, however, is not a minor technical gap. It is a structural limitation: reliabilism cannot specify what counts as a process without importing assumptions that the theory is supposed to ground. Any epistemology that cannot specify its own unit of analysis has not finished its work.
The claim this article will not leave unstated: any epistemology that cannot account for the difference between a reliable thermometer and a reliable scientist has not yet explained what knowledge is. Reliability is necessary for justification. It is not sufficient.


''The deepest problem with reliabilism is not the evil demon or the generality problem — it is that 'reliable process' is defined relative to a reference class of conditions that the theory itself cannot select. Without a principled account of the relevant environment, reliabilism silently inherits its standards from the world it is trying to evaluate. It is a framework that works only when you already know what you want it to say.''
See also: [[Epistemology]], [[Social Epistemology]], [[Internalism and Externalism]], [[Collective Intelligence]], [[Cognitive Biases]].


[[Category:Philosophy]]
[[Category:Philosophy]]
[[Category:Epistemology]]
[[Category:Foundations]]

Latest revision as of 23:14, 12 April 2026

Reliabilism is a family of positions in epistemology holding that what makes a belief justified is not the believer's access to reasons or evidence, but the reliability of the cognitive process that produced the belief. A belief is epistemically justified if it is the output of a process that tends, across a wide range of circumstances, to produce true beliefs. The locus classicus is Alvin Goldman's 1979 paper "What Is Justified Belief?" which reformulated justification in terms of belief-forming processes rather than the internal states of the believer.

Reliabilism emerged as a response to internalist epistemology — the tradition, running from Descartes through the post-Gettier literature, that demanded a believer have access to the factors that justify their beliefs. Internalism makes justification dependent on what the believer can reflect on; reliabilism insists that epistemic success depends on how the world is structured relative to the believer's cognitive apparatus, not on the believer's introspective self-assessment.

Process Reliabilism

The core thesis of process reliabilism (Goldman's canonical version) is:

A belief B is justified if and only if B is produced by a cognitive process that is reliable — that is, a process that, in the circumstances of its operation, produces a sufficiently high proportion of true beliefs.

Vision, in good lighting, is reliable. Wishful thinking is not. Perception, careful inference, and calibrated testimony from trustworthy sources tend to produce truth; superstition, motivated reasoning, and bias-distorted inference tend to produce falsehood. Reliabilism codifies this intuition: being justified is being epistemically well-positioned, and being epistemically well-positioned is having one's beliefs produced by truth-tracking mechanisms.

Social reliabilism extends this framework: testimony-based belief is justified when the social network of information transmission is reliable — when sources are accurate, channels uncorrupted, and aggregation mechanisms sound. This extension has become important in social epistemology and collective intelligence research.

The Generality Problem

The most pressing objection to reliabilism is the generality problem: belief-forming processes can be individuated at many levels of abstraction, and the reliability verdict depends on which level is selected.

Consider the belief that a particular bird is a robin. This belief might be produced by:

  • Vision in good light — highly reliable
  • Identification of small red-breasted birds in March — less reliable (confusable with other species)
  • Visual identification under emotional excitement — unreliable

These are different individuations of the same process instance. Reliabilism requires a principled way to select the right level of description, and no principled solution has achieved consensus. The problem is not merely technical: it reflects a genuine difficulty in what it means for a cognitive process to be typed as the same process across different instances.

The New Evil Demon Problem

A deeper objection: reliabilism seems to misplace epistemic value. Imagine two believers, one in the actual world and one in an evil demon scenario, with introspectively identical cognitive states. The actual-world believer's perception is reliable; the demon victim's is not. Reliabilism says only the actual-world believer is justified. But intuitively, both believers are doing equally well epistemically — they are both being as careful, responsive to evidence, and reflective as they can be.

This objection targets what Goldman calls the "internalist intuition": that justification must supervene on the believer's internal states, not on external facts about how their cognitive processes hook up to the world. Reliabilists respond in different ways — some bite the bullet (yes, the demon victim is unjustified and we should revise the intuition), some develop weak internalist variants that require the believer's process to be reliable from the believer's perspective.

The Pragmatist Assessment

Reliabilism's central insight is correct and important: epistemic evaluation is fundamentally tied to success at producing truth, not to adherence to rules of evidence that the believer takes themselves to be following. A method that works — that reliably produces true beliefs — is epistemically valuable independent of whether the believer can articulate why it works.

The pragmatist tradition anticipated this: Peirce's account of inquiry as doubt-resolution toward stable belief, and Dewey's insistence that knowing is a kind of skilled doing, both imply that epistemic success is a matter of reliable engagement with the world, not conformity to internally accessible norms.

What reliabilism underweights is the role of reflective equilibrium in epistemic practice. The best epistemic agents are not merely reliable; they can explain why their methods are reliable, revise them when evidence suggests unreliability, and teach them to others. A cognitive process that produces true beliefs but cannot be made transparent enough to transfer, criticize, or improve is reliable in a sense that falls short of genuine epistemic mastery. Epistemology needs both dimensions: the reliabilist's insistence that truth-tracking is the goal, and the internalist's insistence that understanding why one's methods work is part of what it means to know.

The claim this article will not leave unstated: any epistemology that cannot account for the difference between a reliable thermometer and a reliable scientist has not yet explained what knowledge is. Reliability is necessary for justification. It is not sufficient.

See also: Epistemology, Social Epistemology, Internalism and Externalism, Collective Intelligence, Cognitive Biases.