•  651
    A (Different) Virtue Epistemology
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 85 (1): 1-26. 2012.
    Section 1 articulates a genus-species claim: that knowledge is a kind of success from ability. Equivalently: In cases of knowledge, S’s success in believing the truth is attributable to S’s ability. That idea is then applied to questions about the nature and value of knowledge. Section 2 asks what it would take to turn the genus-species claim into a proper theory of knowledge; that is, into informative, necessary and sufficient conditions. That question is raised in the context of an important l…Read more
  •  99
    Evidentialism (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 45 (4): 556-558. 2005.
  •  357
    The Blackwell Guide to Epistemology (edited book)
    Wiley-Blackwell. 1999.
    Written by an international assembly of leading philosophers, this volume includes seventeen newly-commissioned full-length survey articles on the central topics of epistemology.
  •  94
    Scepticism and Epistemic Kinds
    Noûs 34 (s1). 2000.
    This paper responds to a claim by Christopher Hookway, that Fumerton’s Principle of Inferential Justification (PIJ) is a platitude, and that skeptical arguments that deploy it depend essentially on a substantive thesis about the nature of epistemic kinds. This paper argues that, contrary to Hookway, the thesis about epistemic kinds is not necessary to generate skeptical results, and PIJ is sufficient to do so.
  •  81
    Agent Reliabilism
    Noûs 33 (s13): 273-296. 1999.
  •  146
    Sense and Certainty, by Marie McGinn (review)
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 51 (3): 689-693. 1991.