TY - JOUR
T1 - Registered Replication Report
T2 - A Large Multilab Cross-Cultural Conceptual Replication of Turri et al. (2015)
AU - Psychological Science Accelerator
AU - Hall, Braeden
AU - Schmidt, Kathleen
AU - Wagge, Jordan
AU - Lewis, Savannah C.
AU - Weissgerber, Sophia C.
AU - Kiunke, Felix
AU - Pfuhl, Gerit
AU - Stieger, Stefan
AU - Tran, Ulrich S.
AU - Barzykowski, Krystian
AU - Bogatyreva, Natalia
AU - Kowal, Marta
AU - Massar, Karl IJn
AU - Pernerstofer, Felizitas
AU - Sorokowski, Piotr
AU - Voracek, Martin
AU - Chartier, Christopher R.
AU - Brandt, Mark J.
AU - Grahe, Jon E.
AU - Özdoğru, Asil A.
AU - Andreychik, Michael R.
AU - Chen, Sau Chin
AU - Evans, Thomas R.
AU - Hautekiet, Caro
AU - IJzerman, Hans
AU - Kačmár, Pavol
AU - Krafnick, Anthony J.
AU - Musser, Erica D.
AU - Vergauwe, Evie
AU - Werner, Kaitlyn M.
AU - Aczel, Balazs
AU - Arriaga, Patrícia
AU - Batres, Carlota
AU - Beaudry, Jennifer L.
AU - Cova, Florian
AU - Ďurbisová, Simona
AU - Cramblet Alvarez, Leslie D.
AU - Feldman, Gilad
AU - Godbersen, Hendrik
AU - Gottfried, Jaroslav
AU - Haeffel, Gerald J.
AU - Hartanto, Andree
AU - Isloi, Chris
AU - McFall, Joseph P.
AU - Milyavskaya, Marina
AU - Moreau, David
AU - Nosáľová, Ester
AU - Papaioannou, Kostas
AU - Ruiz-Fernandez, Susana
AU - Schrötter, Jana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/10/1
Y1 - 2024/10/1
N2 - According to the justified true belief (JTB) account of knowledge, people can truly know something only if they have a belief that is both justified and true (i.e., knowledge is JTB). This account was challenged by Gettier, who argued that JTB does not explain knowledge attributions in certain situations, later called “Gettier-type cases,” wherein protagonists are justified in believing something to be true, but their belief was correct only because of luck. Laypeople may not attribute knowledge to protagonists with justified but only luckily true beliefs. Although some research has found evidence for these so-called Gettier intuitions, Turri et al. found no evidence that participants attributed knowledge in a counterfeit-object Gettier-type case differently than in a matched case of JTB. In a large-scale, cross-cultural conceptual replication of Turri and colleagues’ Experiment 1 (N = 4,724) using a within-participants design and three vignettes across 19 geopolitical regions, we did find evidence for Gettier intuitions; participants were 1.86 times more likely to attribute knowledge to protagonists in standard cases of JTB than to protagonists in Gettier-type cases. These results suggest that Gettier intuitions may be detectable across different scenarios and cultural contexts. However, the size of the Gettier intuition effect did vary by vignette, and the Turri et al. vignette produced the smallest effect, which was similar in size to that observed in the original study. Differences across vignettes suggest that epistemic intuitions may also depend on contextual factors unrelated to the criteria of knowledge, such as the characteristics of the protagonist being evaluated.
AB - According to the justified true belief (JTB) account of knowledge, people can truly know something only if they have a belief that is both justified and true (i.e., knowledge is JTB). This account was challenged by Gettier, who argued that JTB does not explain knowledge attributions in certain situations, later called “Gettier-type cases,” wherein protagonists are justified in believing something to be true, but their belief was correct only because of luck. Laypeople may not attribute knowledge to protagonists with justified but only luckily true beliefs. Although some research has found evidence for these so-called Gettier intuitions, Turri et al. found no evidence that participants attributed knowledge in a counterfeit-object Gettier-type case differently than in a matched case of JTB. In a large-scale, cross-cultural conceptual replication of Turri and colleagues’ Experiment 1 (N = 4,724) using a within-participants design and three vignettes across 19 geopolitical regions, we did find evidence for Gettier intuitions; participants were 1.86 times more likely to attribute knowledge to protagonists in standard cases of JTB than to protagonists in Gettier-type cases. These results suggest that Gettier intuitions may be detectable across different scenarios and cultural contexts. However, the size of the Gettier intuition effect did vary by vignette, and the Turri et al. vignette produced the smallest effect, which was similar in size to that observed in the original study. Differences across vignettes suggest that epistemic intuitions may also depend on contextual factors unrelated to the criteria of knowledge, such as the characteristics of the protagonist being evaluated.
KW - beliefs
KW - epistemic intuitions
KW - folk epistemology
KW - justified true belief
KW - multilab
KW - multilevel modeling
KW - replication
KW - social cognition
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85207778482&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/25152459241267902
DO - 10.1177/25152459241267902
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85207778482
SN - 2515-2459
VL - 7
JO - Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science
JF - Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science
IS - 4
ER -