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Earl Conee

University of Rochester
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    96
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 More details
  • University of Rochester
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Rochester, New York, United States of America
  • All publications (96)
  •  319
    Against moral dilemmas
    Philosophical Review 91 (1): 87-97. 1982.
    E j lemmon, B a o williams, Bas van fraassen, And ruth marcus have argued on behalf of the existence of moral dilemmas, I.E., Cases where an agent is subject to conflicting absolute moral obligations. The paper criticizes this support and contends that no moral dilemma is possible.
    Ethics
  •  5
    Replies
    with Richard Feldman
    In Trent Dougherty (ed.), Evidentialism and its Discontents, Oxford University Press. 2011.
  •  814
    Opposing Skepticism Disjunctively
    Disjunctivists hold that perceiving external objects is fundamentally different from any experiential state that is not a perception. In fact, roughly speaking, disjunctivists say that they have nothing in common. Suppose that it appears to someone as though she perceives something. Disjunctivists say that there are two disparate sorts of facts that could make this true. Either she is genuinely perceiving something, or she is in an experiential state of merely apparent perception. An apparent pe…Read more
    Disjunctivists hold that perceiving external objects is fundamentally different from any experiential state that is not a perception. In fact, roughly speaking, disjunctivists say that they have nothing in common. Suppose that it appears to someone as though she perceives something. Disjunctivists say that there are two disparate sorts of facts that could make this true. Either she is genuinely perceiving something, or she is in an experiential state of merely apparent perception. An apparent perception is fundamentally unlike a perception. Disjunctivists differ in what they say the fundamental difference is. We’ll get to some of that shortly. First I’ll say where I’m headed here.
    DisjunctivismPerceptual JustificationContent Externalist Replies to SkepticismPerception and Skeptic…Read more
    DisjunctivismPerceptual JustificationContent Externalist Replies to SkepticismPerception and Skepticism
  •  117
    Why solve the Gettier problem?
    In D. F. Austin (ed.), Philosophical Analysis, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 55--58. 1988.
    The Gettier Problem
  •  586
    Internalism defended
    with Richard Feldman
    In Hilary Kornblith (ed.), Epistemology: Internalism and Externalism, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 1-18. 2001.
    Epistemic Internalism and ExternalismEpistemology of Memory
  •  284
    The possibility of absent qualia
    Philosophical Review 94 (3): 345-66. 1985.
    Absent Qualia
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