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20Luck and DescriptionsPhilosophia. forthcoming.My main aim in this paper is to argue that luck is description-dependent. In § 1, I introduce and defend the description-dependence thesis of luck. In § 2, I distinguish this thesis from some other theses about the nature of luck in the literature. And finally, § 3 explores some of the significant implications of the thesis.
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27Begging the Question in the Chinese RoomFelsefe Dünyasi 82 26-35. 2025.In this paper, I argue that the Chinese Room Argument, famously offered by John Searle, is not compelling: either, contrary to Searle’s intention, it is a colorful illustration that machines with the right programs have some genuine cognition, or it does nothing more than insisting without any persuasive force that there must be something wrong with Strong Artificial Intelligence.
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18Zihin Felsefesi Antolojisi (edited book)Doruk Yayınları. 2025.Zihin felsefesi, insanın kendini ve dünyayı anlama çabasının merkezinde bulunur. Düşünmenin, bilincin ve deneyimin doğasına ilişkin sorular, felsefe tarihinin en köklü meseleleri arasında yer alırken; günümüzde de derinleşerek ve yeni tartışmalarla zenginleşerek canlılığını sürdürmektedir. Bilinç nedir? Zihin bedenle nasıl ilişkilidir? Düşüncelerimiz yalnızca beynin ürünü müdür, yoksa daha fazlası mı? Bu sorular yalnızca teorik değil, aynı zamanda varoluşsal bir merakın ifadesidir- çünkü insan, …Read more
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3Against McGinn’s MysterianismKilikya Felsefe Dergisi / Cilicia Journal of Philosophy 3 (1): 1-10. 2016.There are two claims that are central to McGinn’s mysterianism: (1) there is a naturalist and constructive solution of the mind-body problem, and (2) we human beings are incapable in principle of solving the mind-body problem. I believe (1) and (2) are compatible: the truth of one does not entail the falsity of the other. However, I will argue that the reasons McGinn presents for thinking that (2) is true are incompatible with the truth of (1), at least on a fairly standard conception of the ter…Read more
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18Perception and Knowledge: Comment on KernIn Ori Beck & Miloš Vuletić (eds.), Empirical Reason and Sensory Experience, Springer Verlag. pp. 127-129. 2024.I argue that Kern's account faces what I call “the residue problem” and that the most straightforward ways of dealing with the problem appear to be hopeless.
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51The Holism of Doxastic JustificationCroatian Journal of Philosophy 25 (73): 13-30. 2025.I argue against the orthodox view of doxastic justification, according to which a belief of a given subject is justified for her just in case the subject has a good reason for the belief and she also bases the belief on that reason. The orthodox view is false, I maintain, because there might be unjustified beliefs that are based on the good reasons that support them. The fault lies with the ‘particularism’ of the orthodox view, which is why it cannot handle those cases where certain ‘holistic’ c…Read more
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514The Holism of Doxastic JustificationCroatian Journal of Philosophy 25 (73): 1-18. 2025.I argue against the orthodox view of doxastic justification, according to which a belief of a given subject is justified for her just in case the subject has a good reason for the belief and she also bases the belief on that reason. The orthodox view is false, I maintain, because there might be unjustified beliefs that are based on the good reasons that support them. The fault lies with the ‘particularism’ of the orthodox view, which is why it cannot handle those cases where certain ‘holistic’ c…Read more
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286A Hybrid Account of Structural RationalityFilozofia Nauki. forthcoming.In this paper, I will present and defend a hybrid account of structural rationality, simultaneously accommodating what two rival accounts, wide-scopism and narrow-scopism, get right. Wide-scopism holds that moving from an incoherent state to a coherent state is always a structurally rational thing to do. Narrow-scopism holds that there are cases in which the particular way in which coherence is achieved matters to structural rationality. The hybrid account I offer here holds that these two claim…Read more
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106Subjective Rationality and the Reasoning ArgumentLogos and Episteme 14 (3): 299-321. 2023.My main aim in this paper is to show that Kolodny’s intriguing argument against wide-scopism – ‘the Reasoning Argument’ – fails. A proper evaluation of the Reasoning Argument requires drawing two significant distinctions, one between thin and thick rational transitions and the other between bare-bones wide-scopism (and narrow-scopism) and embellished wide-scopism (and narrow-scopism). The Reasoning Argument is intended by Kolodny both as an argument against bare-bones wide-scopism and as an argu…Read more
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605Conditional UniquenessOrganon F: Medzinárodný Časopis Pre Analytickú Filozofiu 29 (2): 268-274. 2022.In this paper, I aim to do three things. First, I introduce the distinction between the Uniqueness Thesis (U) and what I call the Conditional Uniqueness Thesis (U*). Second, I argue that despite their official advertisements, some prominent uniquers effectively defend U* rather than U. Third, some influential considerations that have been raised by the opponents of U misfire if they are interpreted as against U*. The moral is that an appreciation of the distinction between U and U* helps to clar…Read more
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853On the Very Idea of Undercutting DefeatLogos and Episteme 12 (4): 403-412. 2021.My aim in this paper is to cast doubt on the idea of undercutting defeat by showing that it is beset by some serious problems. I examine a number of attempts to specify the conditions for undercutting defeat and find them to be defective. Absent further attempts, and on the basis of the considerations offered, I conclude that an adequate notion of undercutting defeat is lacking.
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146Reasons, Rationalization, and RationalityPhilosophia 51 (1): 113-137. 2021.In this paper, I provide an answer to the question “what is it for a reason to be the reason for which a belief is held?” After arguing against the causal account of the reason-for-which connection, I present what I call the rationalization account, according to which a reason R a subject S has for a belief P is the reason for which S holds P just in case R is the premise in S’s rationalization for P, where the argument from R to P becomes S’s rationalization in virtue of her endorsing it. In or…Read more
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65A Dilemma for Epistemic InfinitismBeytulhikme An International Journal of Philosophy 10 (10:1): 13-23. 2020.
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65Epistemic Infinitism, the Reason-Giving Game, and the Regress SkepticCroatian Journal of Philosophy 20 (1): 81-102. 2020.Epistemic infinitism is one of the logically possible responses to the epistemic regress problem, claiming that the justification of a given proposition requires an infinite and non-circular structure of reasons. In this paper, I will examine the dialectic between the epistemic infinitist and the regress skeptic, the sort of skeptic that bases his attack to the possibility of justification on the regress of reasons. I aim to show that what makes epistemic infinitism appear as well-equipped to si…Read more
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771The Priority of Propositional JustificationEstudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 59 167-182. 2019.Turri argues against what he calls an “orthodox” view of the relationship between propositional and doxastic justification, according to which (Basis) it is sufficient for S to be doxastically justified in believing p that p is propositionally justified for S in virtue of having reason(s) R and S believes p on the basis of R. According to Turri, (Basis) is false and hence the orthodox view is wrong. Turri offers “an alternative proposal,” the definitive thesis of which is that the subject’s inte…Read more
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884Harman on Mental Paint and the Transparency of ExperienceOrganon F: Medzinárodný Časopis Pre Analytickú Filozofiu 27 (1): 56-81. 2020.Harman famously argues that a particular class of antifunctionalist arguments from the intrinsic properties of mental states or events (in particular, visual experiences) can be defused by distinguishing “properties of the object of experience from properties of the experience of an object” and by realizing that the latter are not introspectively accessible (or are transparent). More specifically, Harman argues that we are or can be introspectively aware only of the properties of the object of a…Read more
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205Reliabilism, the Generality Problem, and the Basing RelationTheoria 85 (2): 119-144. 2019.In “A well-founded solution to the generality problem,” Comesaña argues, inter alia, for three main claims. One is what I call the unavoidability claim: Any adequate epistemological theory needs to appeal, either implicitly or explicitly, to the notion of a belief’s being based on certain evidence. Another is what I call the legitimacy claim: It is perfectly legitimate to appeal to the basing relation in solving a problem for an epistemological theory. According to Comesaña, the legitimacy claim…Read more
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29On Understanding a Theory on Conscious ExperiencesCroatian Journal of Philosophy 18 (1): 75-86. 2018.McGinn claims, among other things, that we cannot understand the theory that explains how echolocationary experiences arise from the bat’s brain. One of McGinn’s arguments for this claim appeals to the fact that we cannot know in principle what it is like to have echolocationary experiences. According to Kirk, McGinn’s argument fails because it rests on an illegitimate assumption concerning what explanatory theories are supposed to accomplish. However, I will argue that Kirk’s objection misfires…Read more
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44On the Differentia of Epistemic JustificationKilikya Felsefe Dergisi / Cilicia Journal of Philosophy 4 (1): 1-10. 2017.How are we to distinguish epistemic justification for believing a proposition from other sorts of justification one might have for believing it? According to what I call the received view about the differentia of epistemic justification, epistemic justification is intimately connected to “the cognitive goal of arriving at truth” in a specific way no other sorts of justification can possibly be. However, I will argue that the received view is mistaken by showing that there are cases in which prag…Read more
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191Epistemic infinitism and the conditional character of inferential justificationSynthese 195 (5): 2313-2334. 2018.In this paper, I will present and defend an argument from the conditional character of inferential justification against the version of epistemic infinitism Klein advances. More specifically, after proposing a distinction between propositional and doxastic infinitism, which is based on a standard distinction between propositional and doxastic justification, I will describe in considerable detail the argument from conditionality, which is mainly an argument against propositional infinitism, and c…Read more
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141Dretske on Non‐Epistemic SeeingTheoria 83 (4): 364-393. 2017.In this article, I make a distinction between two versions of non-epistemicism about seeing, and bring explicitly into view and argue against a particular version defended by Dretske. More specifically, I distinguish non-epistemic seeing as non-conceptual seeing, where concept possession is assumed to be cognitively demanding, from non-epistemic seeing as seeing without noticing, where noticing is assumed to be relatively cognitively undemanding. After showing that Dretske argues for the possibi…Read more
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263The Given in Perceptual ExperienceSynthese 192 (8). 2015.How are we to account for the epistemic contribution of our perceptual experiences to the reasonableness of our perceptual beliefs? It is well known that a conception heavily influenced by Cartesian thinking has it that experiences do not enable the experiencing subject to have direct epistemic contact with the external world; rather, they are regarded as openness to a kind of private inner realm that is interposed between the subject and the world. It turns out that if one wants to insist that …Read more
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1871Against McGinn's MysterianismCilicia Journal of Philosophy 3 (1): 1-10. 2016.There are two claims that are central to McGinn’s mysterianism: (1) there is a naturalist and constructive solution of the mind-body problem, and (2) we human beings are incapable in principle of solving the mind-body problem. I believe (1) and (2) are compatible: the truth of one does not entail the falsity of the other. However, I will argue that the reasons McGinn presents for thinking that (2) is true are incompatible with the truth of (1), at least on a fairly standard conception of the ter…Read more
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465Physicalism and Phenomenal ConceptsPhilosophical Studies 165 (1): 257-277. 2013.Frank Jackson’s famous Knowledge Argument moves from the premise that complete physical knowledge is not complete knowledge about experiences to the falsity of physicalism. In recent years, a consensus has emerged that the credibility of this and other well-known anti-physicalist arguments can be undermined by allowing that we possess a special category of concepts of experiences, phenomenal concepts, which are conceptually independent from physical/functional concepts. It is held by a large num…Read more
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158Knowing How: Essays on Knowledge, Mind, and Action (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. 2012.
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177Naïve realism and phenomenological directness: reply to MillarPhilosophical Studies 173 (7): 1897-1910. 2016.In this paper, I respond to Millar’s recent criticism of naïve realism. Millar provides several arguments for the thesis that there are powerful phenomenological grounds for preferring the content view to naïve realism. I intend to show that Millar’s arguments are not convincing.