•  1
    Paul Horwich, Meaning (review)
    Philosophy in Review 20 350-353. 2000.
  •  193
    The social virtues: Two accounts (review)
    Acta Analytica 24 (4): 237-248. 2009.
    Social (epistemic) virtues are the virtues bound up with those forms of inquiry involved in social routes to knowledge. A thoroughly individualistic account of the social virtues endorses two claims: (1) we can fully characterize the nature of the social virtues independent of the social factors that are typically in play when these virtues are exemplified, and (2) even when a subject’s route to knowledge is social, the only epistemic virtues that are relevant to her acquisition of knowledge are…Read more
  •  104
    Kant and the Foundations of Analytic Philosophy (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 40 (1): 128-130. 2002.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 40.1 (2002) 128-130 [Access article in PDF] Book Review Kant and the Foundations of Analytic Philosophy Robert Hanna. Kant and the Foundations of Analytic Philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press, 2001. Pp. xv + 312. Cloth, $65.00. Robert Hanna's book has an ambitious two-fold agenda. Its historical agenda is to prompt a reassessment of the role Kant played in the foundations…Read more
  •  297
    Testimonial knowledge in early childhood, revisited
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (1). 2008.
    Many epistemologists agree that even very young children sometimes acquire knowledge through testimony. In this paper I address two challenges facing this view. The first (building on a point made in Lackey (2005)) is the defeater challenge, which is to square the hypothesis that very young children acquire testimonial knowledge with the fact that children (whose cognitive immaturity prevents them from having or appreciating reasons) cannot be said to satisfy the No-Defeaters condition on knowle…Read more
  •  22
    "Gray Matters is a thorough examination of the main topics in recent philosophy of mind. It aims at surveying a broad range of issues, not all of which can be subsumed under one position or one philosopher's theory. In this way, the authors avoid neglecting interesting issues out of allegiance to a given theory of mind." --Book Jacket.
  •  50
    Searle vs. Searle on language, speech, and thought
    with Guiming Yang
    Pragmatics and Cognition 22 (3): 352-372. 2014.
    Searle’s (1963/1991) account of the communicative intentions in speech acts purports to be an advance over that of Grice (1957), in acknowledging the ineliminable role of the linguistic (usage) rules in enabling the hearer to recognize the speaker’s communicative intentions. In this paper we argue that, given some plausible assumptions about ordinary speech exchanges, Searle’s insight on this score is incompatible with his (1983) commitment to internalism in the philosophy of mind. As a result, …Read more
  • Department of Philosophy 1427 Paterson Office Tower University of Kentucky Lexington, KY 40506-0027
    Communication and Cognition: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly Journal 33 (3/4): 249-286. 2000.
  •  308
    Reliabilism in philosophy
    Philosophical Studies 142 (1). 2009.
    The following three propositions appear to be individually defensible but jointly inconsistent: (1) reliability is a necessary condition on epistemic justification; (2) on contested matters in philosophy, my beliefs are not reliably formed; (3) some of these beliefs are epistemically justified. I explore the nature and scope of the problem, examine and reject some candidate solutions, compare the issue with ones arising in discussions about disagreement, and offer a brief assessment of our predi…Read more
  •  177
    In this paper I characterize the problem of first-person authority as it confronts the proponent of the belief box conception of belief, and I develop the groundwork for a belief box account of that authority. If acceptable, the belief box account calls into question (by undermining a popular motivation for) the thesis that first-person authority is not to be traced to a truth-tracking relation between first-person opinions themselves and the beliefs which they are about.
  •  831
    The problem of the many minds
    Minds and Machines 16 (4): 463-470. 2006.
    It is argued that, given certain reasonable premises, an infinite number of qualitatively identical but numerically distinct minds exist per functioning brain. The three main premises are (1) mental properties supervene on brain properties; (2) the universe is composed of particles with nonzero extension; and (3) each particle is composed of continuum-many point-sized bits of particle-stuff, and these points of particle-stuff persist through time.
  •  214
    Anti-individualism, conceptual omniscience, and skepticism
    Philosophical Studies 116 (1): 53-78. 2003.
    Given anti-individualism, a subject might have a priori (non-empirical)knowledge that she herself is thinking that p, have complete and exhaustive explicational knowledge of all of the concepts composing the content that p, and yet still need empirical information (e.g. regarding her embedding conditions and history) prior to being in a position to apply her exhaustive conceptual knowledge in a knowledgeable way to the thought that p. This result should be welcomed by anti-individualists: it squ…Read more
  •  1
    Mark Sainsbury, ed., Thought and Ontology (review)
    Philosophy in Review 19 60-62. 1999.
  •  151
    The relevance of discriminatory knowledge of content
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 80 (2): 136-56. 1999.
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, 80:2, 136-56 (June 1999)
  •  2
    Internalism, externalism and the epistemology of linguistic understanding
    Communication and Cognition. Monographies 41 (3-4): 191-216. 2008.