id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_dqnxqoexsvea3eyfxfbyubjv2i Wesley Buckwalter Intuition Fail: Philosophical Activity and the Limits of Expertise 2014.0 33 .pdf application/pdf 13650 1052 52 reviews these challenges alongside other research findings in cognitive science on expert performance in several fields and argues for three claims. link between intuition and philosophical expertise is disanalogous to expert Second, evidence from cognitive science and experimental philosophy consistent with cross-domain failure can be used to ground a promising new approach to studying philosophical expertise and activity. The literature on skills and expert performance suggests that genuine expertise is domain-specific. professionals bring to bear on responding to thought experiments will probably not result in superior performance outside of the domain of expertise. They may reflect domain specificity of expert philosophical intuition. research suggests that if philosophers are expert intuiters, their expertise is philosophers are expert intuiters, their expertise is most likely also accompanied by susceptibility to theoretical and experimental bias. have argued that if professional philosophers are not expert intuiters, then philosophers expert intuiters? ./cache/work_dqnxqoexsvea3eyfxfbyubjv2i.pdf ./txt/work_dqnxqoexsvea3eyfxfbyubjv2i.txt