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1031Duncan Pritchard, Epistemological DisjunctivismPhilosophical Review 125 (1): 138-142. 2016.Review of Duncan Pritchard's Epistemological Disjunctivism
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820Thought-experiment intuitions and truth in fictionPhilosophical Studies 142 (2). 2009.What sorts of things are the intuitions generated via thought experiment? Timothy Williamson has responded to naturalistic skeptics by arguing that thought-experiment intuitions are judgments of ordinary counterfactuals. On this view, the intuition is naturalistically innocuous, but it has a contingent content and could be known at best a posteriori. We suggest an alternative to Williamson's account, according to which we apprehend thought-experiment intuitions through our grasp on truth in fict…Read more
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275Ignorance and PresuppositionsMind 124 (496): 1207-1219. 2015.I develop a class of counterexamples to Blome-Tillmann’s ‘Presuppositional Epistemic Contextualism’. There are cases in which subjects are ignorant of key propositions that are inconsistent with the pragmatic presuppositions in conversational contexts in which they are discussed; in such contexts, PEC wrongly predicts the subjects to satisfy certain ‘knows’ attributions
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306Basic Knowledge and Contextualist “E = K”Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 2 (4): 282-292. 2013.Timothy Williamson (2000) makes a strong prima facie case for the identification of a subject's total evidence with the subject's total knowledge (E = K). However, as Brian Weatherson (Ms) has observed, there are intuitively problematic consequences of E = K. In this article, I'll offer a contextualist implementation of E = K that provides the resources to respond to Weatherson's argument; the result will be a novel approach to knowledge and evidence that is suggestive of an unexplored contextua…Read more
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85Dreaming, Philosophical IssuesIn Patrick Wilken, Timothy J. Bayne & Axel Cleeremans (eds.), The Oxford Companion to Consciousness, Oxford University Press. 2009.Having fascinated some of the greatest philosophers from the earliest times, dreaming figures importantly in the history of philosophy, as in Plato’s Theaetetus, Augustine’s Confessions, and, perhaps most famously, Descartes’s Mediations. By far the greatest philosophical focus on dreaming has been epistemic: Socrates suggests to Theaetetus that since he cannot tell whether he is dreaming, he cannot trust his senses to know contingent facts about the world around him. And a similar worry drives …Read more
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353Pragmatic Encroachment and Belief-Desire PsychologyAnalytic Philosophy 53 (4): 327-343. 2012.We develop a novel challenge to pragmatic encroachment. The significance of belief-desire psychology requires treating questions about what to believe as importantly prior to questions about what to do; pragmatic encroachment undermines that priority, and therefore undermines the significance of belief-desire psychology. This, we argue, is a higher cost than has been recognized by epistemologists considering embracing pragmatic encroachment.
APA Western Division
Vancouver, Canada
Areas of Interest
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PhilPapers Editorships
| Epistemic Contextualism |
| Contextualist Replies to Skepticism |
| Metaphilosophy |
| Epistemology of Philosophy |