•  2199
    A Plea for Epistemic Excuses
    In Julien Dutant Fabian Dorsch (ed.), The New Evil Demon Problem, Oxford University Press. forthcoming.
    The typical epistemology course begins with a discussion of the distinction between justification and knowledge and ends without any discussion of the distinction between justification and excuse. This is unfortunate. If we had a better understanding of the justification-excuse distinction, we would have a better understanding of the intuitions that shape the internalism-externalism debate. My aims in this paper are these. First, I will explain how the kinds of excuses that should interest epist…Read more
  •  107
    Know Your Rights: On Warranted Assertion and Truth
    Erkenntnis 79 (6): 1355-1365. 2014.
    A standard objection to the suggestion that the fundamental norm of assertion is the truth norm (i.e., one must not assert p unless p) is that this norm cannot explain why warrant requires knowledge-level evidence. In a recent paper, Whiting has defended the truth-first approach to the norms of assertion by appeal to a distinction between the warrant there is to assert and the warrant one has to assert. I shall argue that this latest defensive strategy is unsuccessful