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1643Reasoning and RegressMind 123 (489): 101-127. 2014.Regress arguments have convinced many that reasoning cannot require beliefs about what follows from what. In this paper I argue that this is a mistake. Regress arguments rest on dubious (although deeply entrenched) assumptions about the nature of reasoning — most prominently, the assumption that believing p by reasoning is simply a matter of having a belief in p with the right causal ancestry. I propose an alternative account, according to which beliefs about what follows from what play a consti…Read more
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377Instrumental RationalityEuropean Journal of Philosophy 20 (4): 443-462. 2012.Does rationality require us to take the means to our ends? Intuitively, it seems clear that it does. And yet it has proven difficult to explain why this should be so: after all, if one is pursuing an end that one has decisive reason not to pursue, the balance of reasons will presumably speak against one's taking the means necessary to bring that end about. In this paper I propose a novel account of the instrumental requirement which addresses this problem. On the view I develop, the instrumental…Read more
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1441Transparency as Inference: Reply to Alex ByrneProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 111 (2pt2): 319-324. 2011.In his essay ‘Transparency, Belief, Intention’, Alex Byrne (2011) argues that transparency—our ability to form beliefs about some of our intentional mental states by considering their subject matter, rather than on the basis of special psychological evidence—involves inferring ‘from world to mind’. In this reply I argue that this cannot be correct. I articulate an intuitive necessary condition for a pattern of belief to count as a rule of inference, and I show that the pattern involved in transp…Read more
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97Induction, Normality and Reasoning with Arbitrary ObjectsRatio 30 (2): 137-148. 2017.This paper concerns the apparent fact — discussed by Sinan Dogramaci and Brian Weatherson — that inductive reasoning often interacts in disastrous ways with patterns of reasoning that seem perfectly fine in the deductive case. In contrast to Dogramaci's and Weatherson's own suggestions, I argue that these cases show that we cannot reason inductively about arbitrary objects. Moreover, as I argue, this prohibition is neatly explained by a certain hypothesis about the rational basis of inductive re…Read more
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
Areas of Interest
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| Epistemology |
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Action |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Probability |
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |