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199Epistemological Skepticism(s) and Rational Self-ControlThe Monist 85 (3): 468-477. 2002.In this paper I aim to do two things. First, I attempt to illustrate an interesting pattern of argument one can find in Hume's work. Next, I employ this Humean pattern of argument to show that IF there is a cogent and intuitive argument for any form of epistemological skepticism, which despite its cogency and intuitiveness has a unbelievable conclusion, THEN we lack a very important form of doxastic self-control, which I call rational self-control, over the beliefs problematized by that skeptica…Read more
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199A Really Short Refutation of the Pragmatic Theory of TruthJournal of Philosophical Research 36 31-34. 2011.The pragmatic theory of truth (PTT) seeks to illuminate the concept of truth by focusing on concepts like usefulness or adaptivity. However, contrary to common opinion, PTT does not merely face a narrow band of (perhaps) rather artificial counterexamples (as in a case of empirically unfounded but life-extending optimism in a cancer patient); instead, PTT is faced with a fast psychological research literature which suggests that inaccurate beliefs are both (1) pervasive in human beings and, nonet…Read more
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267The problem of heavenRatio 24 (1): 46-64. 2011.An argument against the rationality of desiring to go to heaven might be put in the form of a trilemma: (1) any state of being that both lasts eternally and preserves me as the person I am would be hellish and therefore would not be a state of being that I could have any reason to desire; (2) any state of being that lasts eternally and yet fails to preserve my personhood by turning me into a non-person would not be a state of being that I (qua person that I am) could have any reason to desire; a…Read more
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211Hume's standard of taste and the de gustibus scepticBritish Journal of Aesthetics 47 (1): 16-28. 2007.In 'Of the Standard of Taste' Hume aspires to silence the 'extravagant' cavils of the anything-goes de gustibus sceptic by developing a programme of aesthetic education that would lead all properly-trained individuals to a set of agreed-upon aesthetic judgements. But I argue that if we read Hume's essay as an attempted direct theoretical refutation of de gustibus scepticism, Hume fails to achieve his aim. Moreover, although some recent commentators have read the essay as aiming at a less ambitio…Read more
Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
1 more
| Epistemology |
| Skepticism |
| David Hume |
| Michel de Montaigne |
| Pyrrhonian Skepticism |
| Academic Skeptics |
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Religion |
| Religious Skepticism |
| Epistemology of Religion, Misc |