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Alex Worsnip

University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
  •  Home
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 More details
  • University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Yale University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2015
Homepage
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America
0000-0002-3757-3756
Areas of Specialization
Epistemology
Meta-Ethics
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Language
Philosophy of Mind
Normative Ethics
Social and Political Philosophy
Philosophy of Social Science
17th/18th Century Philosophy
2 more
  • All publications (62)
  •  490
    Belief, Credence, and the Preface Paradox
    Australasian 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
    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 itself a reductive view: namely, the view that outright belief is credence 1. However, I argue that this view is unsustainable. Moreover, my version of the problem turns on no particular theory of evidence or evidential probability, and so cannot be avoided by adopting some revisionary such theory. In sum, deductive closure is in more serious, and more general, trouble than some have thought.
    Rational RequirementsProbabilistic Puzzles, MiscSubjective Probability, MiscDegrees of BeliefEpistem…Read more
    Rational RequirementsProbabilistic Puzzles, MiscSubjective Probability, MiscDegrees of BeliefEpistemic Paradoxes, Misc
  •  1458
    Explanatory Indispensability and Deliberative Indispensability: Against Enoch's Analogy
    Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 5 (4): 226-235. 2016.
    In this note, I discuss David Enoch's influential deliberative indispensability argument for metanormative realism, and contend that the argument fails. In doing so, I uncover an important disanalogy between explanatory indispensability arguments and deliberative indispensability arguments, one that explains how we could accept the former without accepting the latter.
    Inference to the Best Explanation, MiscDeliberationMoral Realism, MiscMoral DeliberationMoral Episte…Read more
    Inference to the Best Explanation, MiscDeliberationMoral Realism, MiscMoral DeliberationMoral Epistemology, Misc
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