•  11
    According to a classical causal account of perception, to perceive that object x is F is to fulfill the following conditions: (i) one has an experience as of x's being F, (ii) x is F, and (iii) one's experience of x's being F depends causally on x's being F. This is the core of Grice's causal theory of perception, and it is initially quite plausible (Grice 1961).
  • Egozentrizität und Mystik (review)
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 61 (1). 2007.
  •  108
    An Alternative to Endurantism and Perdurantism: Doing Without Occupants
    In Ludger Honnefelder, Edmund Runggaldier & Benedikt Schick (eds.), Unity and Time in Metaphysics, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 134-150. 2009.
  •  99
    The reference of de re representations
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 62 (1): 83-101. 2001.
    Full understanding ofrepresentation requires both an accountofrepresentational content and of reference. Fred Dretske has proposed a powerful theory of representational content, the teleological theory of indicator functions. And he has indicated that he thinks an informational account of reference is basically correct. According to this account, reference is determined by a certain informational relation, the relation of carrying primary information about an object. However, a closer examinatio…Read more
  •  33
    Recently, some philosophers have claimed that consciousness has an important epistemological role to play in the introspective self-ascription of one’s own mental states. This is the thesis of the epistemological role of consciousness for introspective self-knowledge. I will criticize BonJour’s account of the role of consciousness for introspection. He does not provide any reason for believing that conscious states are epistemically better off than non-conscious states. Then I will sketch a repr…Read more
  •  112
    Immediate self-knowledge and avowal
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 70 (1): 193-213. 2006.
  • Consciousness Revisited. Materialism Without Phenomenal Concepts (review)
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 65 (1). 2011.
  •  164
    Three kinds of reliabilism
    Philosophical Explorations 16 (1). 2013.
    I distinguish between three kinds of reliabilism for epistemic justification, namely, pure reliabilism, evidential reliabilism, and reasons reliabilism, and I argue for reasons reliabilism. Pure reliabilism and evidential reliabilism are plagued, most importantly, by the generality problem, and they cannot deal adequately with defeater phenomena. One can avoid these problems only by jettisoning the idea of process reliability. The truth connection ? which is essential for any kind of reliabilism…Read more
  •  105
    Plato’s Meno problem is the problem of why knowledge is better than true belief which is not knowledge. The paper studies the account of this surplus value of knowledge that recent reliabilist virtue epistemologists like John Greco and Ernest Sosa have proposed: knowledge is true belief from epistemic virtue. I reconstruct the master argument which subsumes the epistemic case under the general case of success from virtue. Five accounts of virtue are presented and discussed critically. The result…Read more
  •  104
    Can there be a state which is both a belief and a desire? More exactly, a state which is a belief that p and a desire that q, where p and q may be the same proposition or a different one? Such a state would be a ‘besire’. So a first question is the general question whether besires are possible. Normative attitudes would be good candidates for besires. For example, if Sandra has the normative attitude that it would be best for her to leave the country, this seems to be a propositional state of he…Read more
  •  77
    In this presentation, I argue for a conception of rational capacities that makes us epistemic agents without essential reference or appeal to self-consciousness/self-knowledge, contrary to McDowell, Moran, and others. At the same time, his conception of rational capacities as powers at the personal level saves our epistemic agency against worries that Hilary Kornblith has put forward
  • Kripkes und Chalmers' Argumente gegen den Materialismus
    Philosophia Naturalis 40 (1): 55-81. 2003.
  •  65
    Die Rolle des Wissens und des Wissensbegriffs in der Erkenntnistheorie
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 56 (1). 2002.