•  1703
    Arrogance, anger and debate
    Symposion: Theoretical and Applied Inquiries in Philosophy and Social Sciences 5 (2): 213-227. 2018.
    Arrogance has widespread negative consequences for epistemic practices. Arrogant people tend to intimidate and humiliate other agents, and to ignore or dismiss their views. They have a propensity to mansplain. They are also angry. In this paper I explain why anger is a common manifestation of arrogance in order to understand the effects of arrogance on debate. I argue that superbia (which is the kind of arrogance that is my concern here) is a vice of superiority characterised by an overwhelming …Read more
  •  2084
    Intellectual Servility and Timidity
    Journal of Philosophical Research 43 21-41. 2018.
    Intellectual servility is a vice opposing proper pride about one's intellectual achievements. Intellectual timidity is also a vice; it is manifested in a lack of proper concern for others’ esteem. This paper offers an account of the nature of these vices and details some of the epistemic harms that flow from them. I argue that servility, which is often the result of suffering humiliation, is a form of damaged self-esteem. It is underpinned by attitudes serving social-adjustive functions and caus…Read more
  •  1546
    Epistemic Vice and Motivation
    Metaphilosophy 49 (3): 350-367. 2018.
    This article argues that intellectual character vices involve non-instrumental motives to oppose, antagonise, or avoid things that are epistemically good in themselves. This view has been the recent target of criticism based on alleged counterexamples presenting epistemically vicious individuals who are virtuously motivated or at least lack suitable epistemically bad motivations. The paper first presents these examples and shows that they do not undermine the motivational approach. Finally, havi…Read more
  •  1946
    Intellectual Humility as Attitude
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 96 (2): 399-420. 2016.
    Intellectual humility, I argue in this paper, is a cluster of strong attitudes directed toward one's cognitive make-up and its components, together with the cognitive and affective states that constitute their contents or bases, which serve knowledge and value-expressive functions. In order to defend this new account of humility I first examine two simpler traits: intellectual self-acceptance of epistemic limitations and intellectual modesty about epistemic successes. The position defended here …Read more
  •  80
    Barry Smith (ed.) Questions of taste: the philosophy of wine [Book Review]
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 16 779-82. 2008.
    By Terence Cuneo Oxford University Press, 2007. pp. 263 £35.00 (hbk). ISBN 978 0 19 921883 7 In this richly argued and highly stimulating monograph, Terence Cuneo develops an argument in favour of...
  •  172
    Genes and gays
    The Philosophers' Magazine 11 (11): 51-52. 2000.
  •  151
    Feminist epistemology and philosophy of science is the study of the significance of gender for the acquisition and justification of knowledge. At its inception, feminist epistemology was in large part concerned with science and showed more affinity with the history and philosophy of science and with social and cultural studies of science than with mainstream epistemology. Since the early 2000s, however, significant new trends have led to the production of extremely innovative work, such as a tur…Read more
  •  87
    Real knowing and real norms
    Social Epistemology 12 (3): 241-251. 1998.
  •  163
    Ecological Thinking
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 77 (2): 573-576. 2008.
    No Abstract
  •  164
    Critical Notice of Bilgrami's Self-knowledge and resentment (review)
    Philosophical Books 49 (3): 238-245. 2008.
    No Abstract
  •  187
    Nietzsche's theory of truth
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 73 (4). 1995.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  131
    Spatial attention and perception: seeing without paint
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 14 (3): 433-454. 2015.
    Covert spatial attention alters the way things look. There is strong empirical evidence showing that objects situated at attended locations are described as appearing bigger, closer, if striped, stripier than qualitatively indiscernible counterparts whose locations are unattended. These results cannot be easily explained in terms of which properties of objects are perceived. Nor do they appear to be cases of visual illusions. Ned Block has argued that these results are best accounted for by invo…Read more
  •  274
    Although their positions and arguments differ in several respects, feminists have asserted that science, knowledge, and rationality cannot be severed from their social, political, and cultural aspects.
  •  382
    Perception and action: The taste test
    Philosophical Quarterly 60 (241): 718-734. 2010.
    Traditional accounts of perception endorse an input–output model: perception is the input from world to mind and action is the output from mind to world. In contrast, enactive accounts propose action to be constitutive of perception. We focus on Noë's sensorimotor version of enactivism, with the aim of clarifying the proper limits of enactivism more generally. Having explained Noë's particular version of enactivism, which accounts for the contents of perceptual experience in terms of sensorimoto…Read more
  •  89
  •  51
    Critique of Love. Wendy Brown's Edgework: Critical Essays on Knowledge and Politics (review)
    with Peter Hallward, Jon Beasley-Murray, Bob Cannon, and Philip Derbyshire
    Radical Philosophy 139 (139): 51-53. 2006.
  •  2884
    Standpoint theory then and now
    In Miranda Fricker, Peter Graham, David Henderson & Nikolaj Jang Pedersen (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Social Epistemology, Routledge. 2019.
  •  204
    Emotion and Rationality
    with Mark Lance
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 34 (sup1): 275-295. 2004.