•  353
    Two notions of epistemic normativity
    Theoria 75 (3): 161-178. 2009.
    The overwhelmingly dominant view of epistemic normativity has been an extreme form of deontology. I argue that although the pull towards deontology is quite understandable, given the traditional concerns of epistemology, there is no good reason for not also adopting a complementary consequentialist notion of epistemic normativity, which can be put to use in applied epistemology. I further argue that this consequentialist notion is not, despite appearances and popular sentiment to the contrary, a…Read more
  •  88
    Der Intentionalismus Und Seine Kritiker. Ein Vermittlungs Versuch
    Danish Yearbook of Philosophy 40 (1): 79-108. 2005.
  •  148
    Abstract objects are widely held to pose a formidable epistemological challenge. It has seemed mysterious to many how we can have access to such strange and intangible entities. The article considers five influential ways to meet the challenge: Transcendental arguments, the indispensability argument, insisting that we just are able to grasp abstract objects and that no further explanation is needed, abstractionist accounts, and ontological reduction. None of these approaches is by itself suffici…Read more