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276Narrow-Scoping for Wide-ScopersSynthese 192 (8): 2617-2646. 2015.Many philosophers think that requirements of rationality are “wide-scope”. That is to say: they are requirements to satisfy some material conditional, such that one counts as satisfying the requirement iff one either makes the conditional’s antecedent false or makes its consequent true. These contrast with narrow-scope requirements, where the requirement takes scope only over the consequent of the conditional. Many of the philosophers who have preferred wide-scope requirements to narrow-scope re…Read more
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492Belief, Credence, and the Preface ParadoxAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 94 (3): 549-562. 2016.ABSTRACTMany discussions of the ‘preface paradox’ assume that it is more troubling for deductive closure constraints on rational belief if outright belief is reducible to credence. I show that this is an error: we can generate the problem without assuming such reducibility. All that we need are some very weak normative assumptions about rational relationships between belief and credence. The only view that escapes my way of formulating the problem for the deductive closure constraint is in fact …Read more
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Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Meta-Ethics |