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76When is True Belief Knowledge?Princeton University Press. 2012.Her belief is true, but it isn't knowledge. This is a classic illustration of a central problem in epistemology: determining what knowledge requires in addition to true belief.
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Evidence as a Tracking Relation,'In Luper-Foy Steven (ed.), The Possibility of Knowledge: Nozick and His Critics, Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 119. 1987.
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116Three attempts to refute skepticism and why they failIn Steven Luper (ed.), The Skeptics: Contemporary Essays, Ashgate Publishing. 2003.One of the advantages of classical foundationalism was that it was thought to provide a refutation of skeptical worries, which raise the specter that our beliefs might be extensively mistaken. The most extreme versions of these worries are expressed in familiar thought experiments such as the brain-in-a-vat hypothesis, which imagines a world in which, unbeknownst to you, your brain is in a vat hooked up to equipment programmed to provide it with precisely the same visual, auditory, tactile, and …Read more
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2Chapter 13. Reverse Lottery StoriesIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 73-77. 2012.
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Chapter 8. Knowledge BlocksIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 46-50. 2012.
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107Conceptual diversity in epistemologyIn Paul K. Moser (ed.), The Oxford handbook of epistemology, Oxford University Press. pp. 177--203. 2002.In “Conceptual Diversity in Epistemology,” Richard Foley reflects on such central topics in epistemology as knowledge, warrant, rationality, and justification, with the purpose of distinguishing such concepts in a general theory. Foley uses “warrant” to refer to that which constitutes knowledge when added to true belief and suggests that rationality and justification are not linked to knowledge by necessity. He proceeds to offer a general schema for rationality. This schema enables a distinction…Read more
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70Intellectual Trust in Oneself and OthersCambridge University Press. 2001.To what degree should we rely on our own resources and methods to form opinions about important matters? To what degree should we depend on various authorities, such as a recognized expert or a social tradition? In this provocative account of intellectual trust and authority, Richard Foley argues that it can be reasonable to have intellectual trust in oneself even though it is not possible to provide a defence of the reliability of one's faculties, methods and opinions that does not beg the ques…Read more
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426Beliefs, Degrees of Belief, and the Lockean ThesisIn Franz Huber & Christoph Schmidt-Petri (eds.), Degrees of belief, Springer. pp. 37-47. 2009.What propositions are rational for one to believe? With what confidence is it rational for one to believe these propositions? Answering the first of these questions requires an epistemology of beliefs, answering the second an epistemology of degrees of belief.
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62``Epistemic Luck and the Purely Epistemic"American Philosophical Quarterly 21 (2): 113-124. 1984.
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2Chapter 12. The Lottery and PrefaceIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 70-72. 2012.
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91Reply to Van InwagenAnalysis 40 (March): 101-103. 1980.I reply to professor vaninwagen's comment on an earlier paper of mine ("analysis", March 1979), In which I argue that compatibilists are not committed to accepting the claim that people might have control over the past
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Chapter 18. Instability and KnowledgeIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 91-94. 2012.
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Chapter 20. Believing That I Don’t KnowIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 99-101. 2012.
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97Fumerton’s PuzzleJournal of Philosophical Research 15 109-113. 1990.There is a puzzle that is faced by every philosophical account of rational belief, rational strategy, rational planning or whatever. I describe this puzzle, examine Richard Fumerton’s proposed solution to it and then go on to sketch my own preferred solution.
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2Chapter 9. The Theory of Knowledge and Theory of Justified BeliefIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 51-56. 2012.
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2Chapter 14. Lucky KnowledgeIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 78-80. 2012.
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1Chapter 26. Epistemology within a General Theory of RationalityIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 124-133. 2012.
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199Justified belief as responsible beliefIn Matthias Steup & John Turri (eds.), Contemporary Debates in Epistemology, Blackwell. pp. 313--26. 2013.
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1Chapter 23. A Priori KnowledgeIn When is True Belief Knowledge?, Princeton University Press. pp. 110-112. 2012.
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44. epistemically rational belief as invulnerability to self-criticism1In Steven Luper (ed.), Essential Knowledge: Readings in Epistemology, Longman. pp. 458. 2003.
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28The Thinking Self (review)Review of Metaphysics 42 (2): 407-408. 1988.This book is the final installment of Rosenberg's Kantian trilogy. Each of the three books constitutes a rethinking of some aspect of the Kantian idea that the self and the world are correlative. The first book, Linguistic Representation, put forth an account of the activity of representation. The second, One World and Our Knowledge of It, contained an account of the notion of an objective world. This third book works out an account of the self as a self-conscious subject of experience.