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Hunter Brown, William James on Radical Empiricism and Religion (review)Philosophy in Review 21 322-324. 2001.
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2474Recent Work in Applied Virtue EthicsAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 49 (3): 183-204. 2012.The use of the term "applied ethics" to denote a particular field of moral inquiry (distinct from but related to both normative ethics and meta-ethics) is a relatively new phenomenon. The individuation of applied ethics as a special division of moral investigation gathered momentum in the 1970s and 1980s, largely as a response to early twentieth- century moral philosophy's overwhelming concentration on moral semantics and its apparent inattention to practical moral problems that arose in the wak…Read more
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90Book Reviews : Daniel Little, Varieties of Social Explanation: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Social Science. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1991. pp. vii, 258. $19.95. John Holmwood and Alexander Stewart. Explanation and Social Theory. Lon don : MacMillan, 1991. pp. x, 244. $49.95 (review)Philosophy of the Social Sciences 24 (2): 252-256. 1994.
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1221Two for the show: Anti-luck and virtue epistemologies in consonanceSynthese 158 (3): 363-383. 2007.This essay extends my side of a discussion begun earlier with Duncan Pritchard, the recent author of Epistemic Luck. Pritchard’s work contributes significantly to improving the “diagnostic appeal” of a neo-Moorean philosophical response to radical scepticism. While agreeing with Pritchard in many respects, the paper questions the need for his concession to the sceptic that the neo-Moorean is capable at best of recovering “‘brute’ externalist knowledge”. The paper discusses and directly responds …Read more
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98Cognitive Economy (review)Newsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 19 (60): 14-16. 1991.
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1984Possibility and Permission? Intellectual Character, Inquiry, and the Ethics of BeliefIn Pihlstrom S. & Rydenfelt H. (eds.), William James on Religion, (palgrave Mcmillan “philosophers in Depth” Series. 2014.This chapter examines the modifications William James made to his account of the ethics of belief from his early ‘subjective method’ to his later heightened concerns with personal doxastic responsibility and with an empirically-driven comparative research program he termed a ‘science of religions’. There are clearly tensions in James’ writings on the ethics of belief both across his career and even within Varieties itself, tensions which some critics think spoil his defense of what he calls reli…Read more
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120Epistemic-Virtue Talk: The Reemergence of American Axiology?Journal of Speculative Philosophy 10 (3): 172-198. 1996.This was my first paper on virtue epistemology, and already highlights the connections with epistemic value and axiology which I would later develop. Although most accounts were either internalist or externalist in an exclusive sense, I suggest an inquiry-focused version through connections with the American pragmatism.
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3169William James on Pragmatism and ReligionIn Jacob L. Goodson (ed.), William James, Moral Philosophy, and the Ethical Life: The Cries of the Wounded, Lexington Books. pp. 317-336. 2017.Critics and defenders of William James both acknowledge serious tensions in his thought, tensions perhaps nowhere more vexing to readers than in regard to his claim about an individual’s intellectual right to their “faith ventures.” Focusing especially on “Pragmatism and Religion,” the final lecture in Pragmatism, this chapter will explore certain problems James’ pragmatic pluralism. Some of these problems are theoretical, but others concern the real-world upshot of adopting James permissive eth…Read more
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739Originally titled “Institutional, Group, and Individual Virtue,” this was my paper for an Invited Symposium on "Intersections between Social, Feminist, and Virtue Epistemologies," APA Pacific Division Meeting, April 2011, San Diego. Abstract: This paper examines recent research on individual, social, and institutional virtues and vices; the aim is to explore and make proposals concerning their inter-relationships, as well as to highlight central questions for future research with the study of ea…Read more
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237The Role of the Intellectual Virtues in the Reunification of EpistemologyThe Monist 81 (3): 488-508. 1998.If description of mental processes and evaluation of agents and their beliefs are rightly to be considered as complementary concerns on any plausible construal of the epistemological project, then this relationship cries out for explanation. For the complementarity of these concerns is hardly straightforward: One cannot epistemically evaluate a belief without knowing how it was formed, a causal or a scientific question; on the other hand, epistemic norms are and must be used to evaluate our scie…Read more
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882Religious Pluralism and its Discontents: Faith and the ‘Logic of Exclusion'Journal of Indian Philosophy and Religion 8 49-74. 2003.Debate over the adequacy of John Hick's conception of religious pluralism is engaged in a comparative manner.
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206In the tracks of the historicist movement: Re-assessing the Carnap-Kuhn connectionStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 24 (1): 119-146. 1993.Thirty years after the publication of Thomas Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, sharp disagreement persists concerning the implications of Kuhn’s "historicist" challenge to empiricism. I discuss the historicist movement over the past thirty years, and the extent to which the discourse between two branches of the historical school has been influenced by tacit assumptions shared with Rudolf Carnap’s empiricism. I begin with an examination of Carnap’s logicism --his logic of science-- …Read more
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98Courage, Caution and Heaven’s GateThe Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 4 77-89. 1999.The criteria of “forced, live, and momentous options,” as William James utilized them in his pragmatic defense of religious belief, cannot, I argue, both support religious pluralism and acknowledge lessons about failure of epistemic responsibility in Heaven’s Gate-followers. But I attempt to re-vitalize the pragmatic argument, showing it capable of walking this narrow line. I proceed (1) by developing the distinction and relationship between a commitment to a particular religious system or commu…Read more
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2806The Dialectics of ObjectivityJournal of the Philosophy of History 6 (3): 339-368. 2012.This paper develops under-recognized connections between moderate historicist methodology and character (or virtue) epistemology, and goes on to argue that their combination supports a “dialectical” conception of objectivity. Considerations stemming from underdetermination problems motivate our claim that historicism requires agent-focused rather than merely belief-focused epistemology; embracing this point helps historicists avoid the charge of relativism. Considerations stemming from the genea…Read more
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240Expanding Epistemology: A Responsibilist ApproachPhilosophical Papers 37 (1): 51-87. 2008.The first part of this paper asks why we need, or what would motivate, ameaningful expansion of epistemology. It answers with three critical arguments found in the recent literature, which each purport to move us some distance beyond the preoccupations of ‘post-Gettier era’ analytic epistemology. These three—the ‘epistemic luck,’ ‘epistemic value’ and ‘epistemic reconciliation’ arguments associated with D. Pritchard, J. Kvanvig, and M. Williams, respectively—each carry this implication of needed…Read more
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279Teaching James’s “The Will to Believe”Teaching Philosophy 24 (4): 325-345. 2001.William James’s lecture “The Will to Believe” presents his pragmatic “defense” of religious beliefs, one aimed at rebutting W. K. Clifford’s famous evidentialist principle that “It is always wrong, always, everywhere, and for anyone, to believe anything on insufficient evidence.” This paper presents a number of classroom tools and techniques for teaching James’s lecture, for contrasting it against arguments for God’s existence, and for positioning his lecture in a broader context of the “ethics …Read more
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927In the centennial year of John Dewey’s classic, Democracy and Education (1916), this paper revisits his thesis of the reciprocity of means and ends, arguing that it remains of central importance for debate over the aims of education. The paper provides a Dewey-inspired rebuttal of arguments for an ‘ultimate aim,’ but balances this with a development of the strong overlaps between proponents of pragmatism, intellectual virtues education (Jason Baehr) and critical thinking education (Harvey Siegel…Read more
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162Reflective Knowledge: Apt Belief and Reflective Knowledge – Ernest SosaPhilosophical Quarterly 61 (242): 203-205. 2011.A review of Ernest Sosa’s book Apt Belief and Reflective Knowledge. While I think Sosa is quite right that knowledge lies on a spectrum, and that its higher but not its lower reaches require of knowers, when challenged, a strong degree of explanatory coherence (ability to understand and discursively defend the basis of their beliefs), I also point out problems with certain aspects of his account.
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213Felix culpa: Luck in ethics and epistemologyMetaphilosophy 34 (3): 331-352. 2003.Luck threatens in similar ways our conceptions of both moral and epistemic evaluation. This essay examines the problem of luck as a metaphilosophical problem spanning the division between subfields in philosophy. I first explore the analogies between ethical and epistemic luck by comparing influential attempts to expunge luck from our conceptions of agency in these two subfields. I then focus upon Duncan Pritchard's challenge to the motivations underlying virtue epistemology, based specifically …Read more
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1315Agency ascriptions in ethics and epistemology: Or, navigating intersections, narrow and broadMetaphilosophy 41 (1-2): 73-94. 2010.In this article, the logic and functions of character-trait ascriptions in ethics and epistemology is compared, and two major problems, the "generality problem" for virtue epistemologies and the "global trait problem" for virtue ethics, are shown to be far more similar in structure than is commonly acknowledged. I suggest a way to put the generality problem to work by making full and explicit use of a sliding scale--a "narrow-broad spectrum of trait ascription"-- and by accounting for the variou…Read more
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1Review of Rosenbaum (review)Contemporary Pragmatism 178-187. 2003.There are many books on the market about religion in American thought and history, but the idea for a collection of essays focused directly upon pragmatist reconstructions of religious belief and sentiment is overdue. Stuart Rosenbaum’s reader admirably fills this need, and is bound to bring fresh insights to students and advanced researchers alike.
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1320Thinking Twice about Virtue and Vice: Philosophical Situationism and the Vicious Minds HypothesisLogos and Episteme 8 (1): 7-39. 2017.This paper provides an empirical defense of credit theories of knowing against Mark Alfano’s challenges to them based on his theses of inferential cognitive situationism and of epistemic situationism. In order to support the claim that credit theories can treat many cases of cognitive success through heuristic cognitive strategies as credit-conferring, the paper develops the compatibility between virtue epistemologies qua credit theories, and dual-process theories in cognitive psychology. It als…Read more
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2197Recent Work in Virtue EpistemologyAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 34 (1): 1--27. 1997.This article traces a growing interest among epistemologists in the intellectuals of epistemic virtues. These are cognitive dispositions exercised in the formation of beliefs. Attempts to give intellectual virtues a central normative and/or explanatory role in epistemology occur together with renewed interest in the ethics/epistemology analogy, and in the role of intellectual virtue in Aristotle's epistemology. The central distinction drawn here is between two opposed forms of virtue epistemolog…Read more
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2410Just the right thickness: a defense of second-wave virtue epistemologyPhilosophical Papers 37 (3): 413-434. 2008.Do the central aims of epistemology, like those of moral philosophy, require that we designate some important place for those concepts located between the thin-normative and the non-normative? Put another way, does epistemology need ‘thick’ evaluative concepts? There are inveterate traditions in analytic epistemology which, having legitimized a certain way of viewing the nature and scope of epistemology’s subject matter, give this question a negative verdict; further, they have carried with them…Read more
Radford, Virginia, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
2 more
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Religion |
| Virtue Epistemology |
| Inductive Reasoning |
| Critical Thinking |
| William James |
| John Dewey |