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286Believing intentionallySynthese 194 (8): 2673-2694. 2017.According to William Alston, we lack voluntary control over our propositional attitudes because we cannot believe intentionally, and we cannot believe intentionally because our will is not causally connected to belief formation. Against Alston, I argue that we can believe intentionally because our will is causally connected to belief formation. My defense of this claim is based on examples in which agents have reasons for and against believing p, deliberate on what attitude to take towards p, an…Read more
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323Empiricism, metaphysics, and voluntarismSynthese 178 (1): 19-26. 2011.This paper makes three points: First, empiricism as a stance is problematic unless criteria for evaluating the stance are provided. Second, Van Fraassen conceives of the empiricist stance as receiving its content, at least in part, from the rejection of metaphysics. But the rejection of metaphysics seems to presuppose for its justification the very empiricist doctrine Van Fraassen intends to replace with the empiricist stance. Third, while I agree with Van Fraassen’s endorsement of voluntarism, …Read more
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164Destructive defeat and justificational force: the dialectic of dogmatism, conservatism, and meta-evidentialismSynthese 195 (7): 2907-2933. 2018.Defeaters can prevent a perceptual belief from being justified. For example, when you know that red light is shining at the table before you, you would typically not be justified in believing that the table is red. However, can defeaters also destroy a perceptual experience as a source of justification? If the answer is ‘no’, the red light defeater blocks doxastic justification without destroying propositional justification. You have some-things-considered, but not all-things-considered, justifi…Read more
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14A Defense of InternalismIn L. Pojman (ed.), The Theory of Knowledge: Classical and Contemporary Readings, 2nd edition, Wadsworth Publishing. 1999.
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132Unrestricted Foundationalism and the Sellarsian DilemmaGrazer Philosophische Studien 60 (1): 75-98. 2000.I propose a version of foundationaUsm with the following distinctive features. First, it includes in the class of basic beliefs ordinary beliefs about physical objects. This makes it unrestricted. Second, it assigns the role of ultimate justifiers to A-states: states of being appeared to in various ways. Such states have propositional content, and are justifiers if they are presumptively reliable. The beliefs A-states justify are basic if they are non-inferential. In the last three sections of t…Read more
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Areas of Specialization
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Knowledge |
| Skepticism |
| Metaphysics |