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52The Likelihood of KnowledgeReview of Metaphysics 42 (3): 632-632. 1989.This is a competent review and critique of contemporary theories of knowledge and justification. With the exception of memory, truth and the a priori, most of the standard subjects are discussed: certainty, incorrigibility, perception, the given, rationality, and scepticism. There are a few new technical wrinkles, but no real surprises. The book's strength lies, instead, in its solid, sensible treatment of most topics.
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4The epistemology of painIn Murat Aydede (ed.), Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study, Mit Press. pp. 3-20. 2005.
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3Information-theoretic SemanticsIn Brian McLaughlin, Ansgar Beckermann & Sven Walter (eds.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy of mind, Oxford University Press. 2007.
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4Putting information to workIn Philip P. Hanson (ed.), Information, Language and Cognition, University of British Columbia Press. 1990.
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181Reply to LopesPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 60 (2): 455-460. 2000.There is a terminological matter that should be settled before getting down to business. Lopes himself is not confused about this, but a reader—especially one who doesn't pay much attention to footnotes —might easily be.
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306Externalism and Modest ContextualismErkenntnis 61 (2-3): 173-186. 2004.Externalism about knowledge commits one to a modest form of contextualism: whether one knows depends (or may depend) on circumstances (context) of which one has no knowledge. Such modest contextualism requires the rejection of the KK Principle (If S knows that P, then S knows that S knows that P) - something most people would want to reject anyway - but it does not require (though it is compatible with) a rejection of closure. Radical contextualism, on the other hand, goes a step farther and rel…Read more
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2Minds, Machines and Meaning in Philosophy and Technology II. Information Technology and Computers in Theory and PracticeBoston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 90 97-109. 1986.
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119A MisrepresentationIn Alvin I. Goldman (ed.), Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science, Mit Press. pp. 297. 1993.
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234Machines and the mentalProceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 59 (1): 23-33. 1985.
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Reply: Causal relevance and explanatory exclusionIn Enrique Villanueva (ed.), Information, Semantics and Epistemology, Blackwell. 1990.
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132The informational character of representationsBehavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (3): 376-377. 1982.
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368Particular reidentificationPhilosophy of Science 31 (2): 133-142. 1964.A certain dilemma is inherent in relational accounts of space and time. If any objects endure through change, then temporal elements other than relations are required to describe them. If, on the other hand, no objects endure through change, no permanent reference system is available in terms of which to define the "same place" at different times. An argument which, by exploiting this latter difficulty, attempts to show that "objects with some endurance through time" must be accepted as fundamen…Read more
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4Skepticism: What perception teachesIn The Skeptics: Contemporary Essays, Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing. 2003.
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376Information and ClosureErkenntnis 64 (3): 409-413. 2006.Peter Baumann and Nicholas Shackel defend me against a serious criticism by Christoph Jäger. They argue that my account of information is consistent with my denial of closure for knowledge. Information isn’t closed under known entailment either. I think that, technically speaking, they are right. But the way they are right doesn’t help me much in my effort to answer the skeptic. I describe a way in which information, like knowledge, fails to be closed in a way that makes an information-based acc…Read more