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    Burge proposes the Acceptance Principle"", which states that it is apriori that a hearer may properly accept what she is told in the absence of defeaters, since any giver of testimony is a rational agent, and as such one can presume she is a ""source of truth"". It is claimed that Burge's Principle is not intuitively compelling, so that a suasive, not merely an explanatory justification for it is needed.
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    Content, cause and funtion
    Philosophical Books 32 (3): 136-144. 1991.
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    Testimony: Knowing through being told
    In Ilkka Niiniluoto, Matti Sintonen & Jan Woleński (eds.), Handbook of Epistemology, Kluwer Academic. pp. 109--130. 2004.
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    Against Gullibility
    In A. Chakrabarti & B. K. Matilal (eds.), Knowing from Words, Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1994.
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    Unreliable Testimony
    In Hilary Kornblith & Brian McLaughlin (eds.), Goldman and his Critics, Blackwell. pp. 88-120. 2016.
    Reliabilism is the dominant theory in contemporary analytic epistemology. This chapter reviews some considerations which throw doubt on the widely accepted thesis or R‐NEC that reliability is necessary for knowledge. It considers whether the generally pessimistic results in the experimental literature from social psychology concerning subjects’ ability in a test situation to tell, from behavioral cues, whether a speaker is lying, present a severe challenge for R‐NEC. The chapter develops a more …Read more
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    Second-hand knowledge
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 73 (3). 2006.
    We citizens of the 21st century live in a world where division of epistemic labour rules. Most of what we know we learned from the spoken or written word of others, and we depend in endless practical ways on the technological fruits of the dispersed knowledge of others—of which we often know almost nothing—in virtually every moment of our lives. Interest has been growing in recent years amongst philosophers, in the issues in epistemology raised by this fact. One issue concerns the depth and exte…Read more
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