•  57
    The Social Diffusion of Warrant and Rationality
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (S1): 118-138. 2006.
    Many people agree that a proper epistemological treatment of testimonial knowledge will regard testimonial warrant—the total truth-conducive support enjoyed by a belief grounded on a piece of testimony —as socially diffuse, in the sense that it is not something that supervenes on the proper functionality of the hearer’s cognitive resources together with the reasons she has for accepting the testimony. After arguing for such a view, I go on to identify a challenge many people think flows from an …Read more
  •  42
    Anti-individualism and knowledge
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 74 (2). 2007.
  •  135
    How lucky can you get?
    Synthese 158 (3): 315-327. 2007.
    In this paper, I apply Duncan Pritchard’s anti-luck epistemology to the case of knowledge through testimony. I claim that Pritchard’s distinction between veritic and reflective luck provides a nice taxonomy of testimony cases, that the taxonomic categories that emerge can be used to suggest precisely what epistemic statuses are transmissible through testimony, and that the resulting picture can make clear how testimony can actually be knowledge-generating
  •  8
    The Epistemology of Silence
    In Duncan Pritchard, Alan Millar & Adrian Haddock (eds.), Social Epistemology, Oxford University Press. pp. 243--261. 2008.