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2Epistemic LuckIn Jonathan Dancy, Ernest Sosa & Matthias Steup (eds.), A companion to epistemology, second edition, Blackwell. pp. 336-340. 2010.
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195The Commonsense Case for Ethical VegetarianismBetween the Species: A Journal of Ethics 19 (1): 2-31. 2016.The article defends ethical vegetarianism, which, for present purposes, is stipulatively taken to be the view that it is morally wrong to eat animals when equally nutritious plant-based foods are available. Several examples are introduced to show that we all agree that animals deserve some direct moral consideration and to help identify and clarify several commonsense moral principles—principles we all accept. These principles are then used to argue that eating animals is morally wrong. Since yo…Read more
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295Is epistemic luck compatible with knowledge?Southern Journal of Philosophy 30 (2): 59-75. 1992.
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7751The Immorality of Eating MeatChapter in The Moral Life 856-889. 2000.Unlike other ethical arguments for veganism, the argument advanced is not predicated on the wrongness of speciesism, nor does it depend on your believing that all animals are equal or that all animals have a right to life, nor is it predicated on some highly contentious metaethical theory which you reject. Rather, it is predicated on your beliefs. Simply put, the argument shows that even those of you who are steadfastly committed to valuing humans over nonhumans are nevertheless committed to the…Read more
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108Do Animals Have Rights and Does It Matter if They Don't?In Mylan Engel & Gary Lynn Comstock (eds.), The Moral Rights of Animals, Lexington Books. pp. 39-64. 2016.
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919The problem of other minds: A reliable solutionActa Analytica 11 87-109. 1996.Paul Churchland characterizes the "epistemological problem" in philosophy of mind as the problem "concerned with how we come to have knowledge of the internal activities of conscious, intelligent minds." This problem is itself divided into two separate, but related problems: (1) the problem of self-consciousness -- that of determining how one comes to have knowledge of one's own mental states, and (2) the problem of other minds -- that of explaining how one can ever come to know that something o…Read more
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137Review of Practical Ethics, 3rd Edition by Peter Singer1 (review)American Journal of Bioethics 11 (12): 73-75. 2011.The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 11, Issue 12, Page 73-75, December 2011
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1055A noncontextualist account of contextualist linguistic dataActa Analytica 20 (2): 56-79. 2005.The paper takes as its starting point the observation that people can be led to retract knowledge claims when presented with previously ignored error possibilities, but offers a noncontextualist explanation of the data. Fallibilist epistemologies are committed to the existence of two kinds of Kp -falsifying contingencies: (i) Non-Ignorable contingencies [NI-contingencies] and (ii) Properly-Ignorable contingencies [PI-contingencies]. For S to know that p, S must be in an epistemic position to rul…Read more
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Paul Warren TaylorIn Engel Jr Mylan (ed.), Encyclopedia of Environmental Ethics and Philosophy, Vol. 2, Gale Cengage Learning. pp. 302-304. 2008.
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1170The Equivocal or Question-Begging Nature of Evil Demon Arguments for External World SkepticismSouthwest Philosophy Review 21 (1): 163-178. 2005.
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358Personal and doxastic justification in epistemologyPhilosophical Studies 67 (2): 133-150. 1992.
DeKalb, Illinois, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Religion |
| Applied Ethics |
| Meta-Ethics |