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John Greco

Georgetown University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    156
    • Most Recent
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    • Topics
  •  Events
    20
  •  News and Updates
    114
  •  Philosophical Views

 More details
  • Georgetown University
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Brown University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1989
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Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Epistemology
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Religion
Metaphysics and Epistemology
  • All publications (156)
  •  415
    Agent reliabilism
    Philosophical Perspectives 13 273-296. 1999.
    This paper reviews two skeptical arguments and argues that a reliabilist framework is necessary to avoid them. The paper also argues that agent reliabilism, which makes the knower the seat of reliability, is the most plausible version of reliabilism.
    ReliabilismEpistemic ValueVirtue Epistemology
  •  108
    Review of Noah Lemos, Common Sense: A Contemporary Defense (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2005 (7). 2005.
    Dogmatist and Moorean Replies to Skepticism
  •  101
    Warranted Christian Belief (review)
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 75 (3): 461-466. 2001.
    RevelationReformed EpistemologyReligious Experience
  •  154
    Pritchard's Epistemological Disjunctivism: How Right? How Radical? How Satisfying? (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 64 (254): 115-122. 2014.
    Disjunctivism
  •  429
    How to be a Pragmatist: C. I. Lewis and Humean Skepticism
    Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 42 (1): 24-31. 2006.
    Murray G. Murphey’s masterful treatment of C. I. Lewis’s philosophy leaves two things amply clear: first, that Lewis struggled with skeptical arguments from Hume throughout his career; and second, that Lewis never adequately resolved the problems raised by those arguments. In this paper I will consider Lewis’s approach to Hume’s skepticism in Mind and the World Order (MWO) and in An Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation (AKV), and I will argue that Lewis’s reply to Hume in these works did not cha…Read more
    Murray G. Murphey’s masterful treatment of C. I. Lewis’s philosophy leaves two things amply clear: first, that Lewis struggled with skeptical arguments from Hume throughout his career; and second, that Lewis never adequately resolved the problems raised by those arguments. In this paper I will consider Lewis’s approach to Hume’s skepticism in Mind and the World Order (MWO) and in An Analysis of Knowledge and Valuation (AKV), and I will argue that Lewis’s reply to Hume in these works did not change as dramatically as Murphey claims. Nevertheless, I agree with Murphey that there are two quite different lines of reply discernable in Lewis, and that neither adequately answers Hume. In the final part of the paper I argue that Lewis’s pragmatism gives us resources for an adequate reply to Hume’s skeptical arguments, although it is not the reply that Lewis himself gives.
    Replies to Skepticism, MiscCharles Sanders PeirceHistory: SkepticismHume and Other PhilosophersHume:…Read more
    Replies to Skepticism, MiscCharles Sanders PeirceHistory: SkepticismHume and Other PhilosophersHume: Skepticism
  •  140
    Virtue Epistemology and the Relevant Sense of “Relevant Possibility”
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 32 (1): 61-77. 1994.
    In this paper I defend a relevant possibilities approach against a familiar kind of skepticism, and I argue that virtue epistemology can provide a theoretical grounding for the kind of solutions that is offered. In the section that follows I outline both the skeptical problems and the solution. In the remaining sections I develop the proposal in more detail. If my argument is sound then the paper also constitutes an argument in favor of virtue epistemology.
    Relevant Alternative Replies to SkepticismEpistemic VirtuesSkepticism, MiscVirtue Epistemology
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