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150Review: John Bishop: Believing by Faith: An Essay in the Epistemology and Ethics of Religious Belief (review)Mind 118 (469): 151-155. 2009.
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173Is foundational a priori justification indispensable?Episteme 10 (3): 317-331. 2013.Laurence BonJour's (1985) coherence theory of empirical knowledge relies heavily on a traditional foundationalist theory of a priori knowledge. He argues that a foundationalist, rationalist theory of a priori justification is indispensable for a coherence theory. BonJour (1998) continues this theme, arguing that a traditional account of a priori justification is indispensable for the justification of putative a priori truths, the justification of any non-observational belief and the justificatio…Read more
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165Direct phenomenal beliefs, cognitive significance, and the specious presentPhilosophical Studies 168 (2): 483-489. 2014.Chalmers (The character of consciousness, 2010) argues for an acquaintance theory of the justification of direct phenomenal beliefs. A central part of this defense is the claim that direct phenomenal beliefs are cognitively significant. I argue against this. Direct phenomenal beliefs are justified within the specious present, and yet the resources available with the present ‘now’ are so impoverished that it barely constrains the content of a direct phenomenal belief. I argue that Chalmers’s acco…Read more
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191Functionalism about Truth and the Metaphysics of ReductionActa Analytica 27 (1): 13-27. 2012.Functionalism about truth is the view that truth is an explanatorily significant but multiply-realizable property. According to this view the properties that realize truth vary from domain to domain, but the property of truth is a single, higher-order, domain insensitive property. We argue that this view faces a challenge similar to the one that Jaegwon Kim laid out for the multiple realization thesis. The challenge is that the higher-order property of truth is equivalent to an explanatorily idl…Read more
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194Social EvilOxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion 5 209-233. 2014.Social evil is any pain or suffering brought about by game-theoretic interactions of many individuals. This paper introduces and discusses the problem of social evil. I begin by focusing on social evil brought about by game-theoretic interactions of rational moral individuals. The problem social evil poses for theism is distinct from problems posed by natural and moral evils. Social evil is not a natural evil because it is brought about by the choices of individuals. But social evil is not a for…Read more
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521Kelly James Clark and Raymond VanArragon , Evidence and Religious Belief, oxford University Press, 2011European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 5 (3): 177-183. 2013.
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265Hell, Vagueness, and JusticeFaith and Philosophy 25 (3): 322-328. 2008.Ted Sider’s paper “Hell and Vagueness” challenges a certain conception of Hell by arguing that it is inconsistent with God’s justice. Sider’s inconsistencyargument works only when supplemented by additional premises. Key to Sider’s case is a premise that the properties upon which eternal destinies superveneare “a smear,” i.e., they are distributed continuously among individuals in the world. We question this premise and provide reasons to doubt it. The doubts come from two sources. The first is …Read more
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314BonJour and the Myth of the GivenRes Philosophica 90 (2): 185-201. 2013.The Sellarsian dilemma is a powerful argument against internalistic foundationalist views that aim to end the regress of reasons in experiential states. LaurenceBonJour once defended the soundness of this dilemma as part of a larger argument for epistemic coherentism. BonJour has now renounced his earlier conclusions about the dilemma and has offered an account of internalistic foundationalism aimed, in part, at showing the errors of his former ways. I contend that BonJour’s early concerns about…Read more
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69Review of Paul J. Weithman (ed.), Liberal Faith: Essays in Honor of Philip Quinn (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (2). 2010.
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265Is There an 'I' in Epistemology?Dialectica 66 (4): 517-541. 2012.Epistemic conservatism is the thesis that the mere holding of a belief confers some positive epistemic status on its content. Conservatism is widely criticized on the grounds that it conflicts with the main goal in epistemology to believe truths and disbelieve falsehoods. In this paper I argue for conservatism and defend it from objections. First, I argue that the objection to conservatism from the truth goal in epistemology fails. Second, I develop and defend an argument for conservatism from t…Read more
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128Explanationist Plasticity and the Problem of the CriterionPhilosophical Papers 40 (3): 395-419. 2011.Abstract This paper develops an explanationist treatment of the problem of the criterion. Explanationism is the view that all justified reasoning is justified in virtue of the explanatory virtues: simplicity, fruitfulness, testability, scope, and conservativeness. A crucial part of the explanationist framework is achieving wide reflective equilibrium. I argue that explanationism offers a plausible solution to the problem of the criterion. Furthermore, I argue that a key feature of explanationism…Read more
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235Why Explanatoriness Is Evidentially RelevantThought: A Journal of Philosophy 3 (2): 145-153. 2014.William Roche and Elliott Sober argue that explanatoriness is evidentially irrelevant. This conclusion is surprising since it conflicts with a plausible assumption—the fact that a hypothesis best explains a given set of data is evidence that the hypothesis is true. We argue that Roche and Sober's screening-off argument fails to account for a key aspect of evidential strength: the weight of a body of evidence. The weight of a body of evidence affects the resiliency of probabilities in the light o…Read more
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300Know How to Be Gettiered?Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 79 (3). 2009.Jason Stanley and Timothy Williamson's influential article "Knowing How" argues that knowledge-how is a species of knowledge-that. One objection to their view is that knowledge-how is significantly different than knowledge-that because Gettier cases afflict the latter but not the former. Stanley and Williamson argue that this objection fails. Their response, however, is not adequate. Moreover, I sketch a plausible argument that knowledge-how is not susceptible to Gettier cases. This suggests a s…Read more
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181Basic reasons and first philosophy: A coherentist view of reasonsSouthern Journal of Philosophy 50 (1): 75-93. 2012.This paper develops and defends a coherentist account of reasons. I develop three core ideas for this defense: a distinction between basic reasons and noninferential justification, the plausibility of the neglected argument against first philosophy, and an emergent account of reasons. These three ideas form the backbone for a credible coherentist view of reasons. I work toward this account by formulating and explaining the basic reasons dilemma. This dilemma reveals a wavering attitude that cohe…Read more
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111Reason and ExplanationPalgrave Macmillan. 2014.Reason and Explanation develops a new explanationist account of epistemic justification. Poston argues that the explanatory virtues provide a plausible account of necessary and sufficient conditions for justification. The justification of a subject's belief consists in the explanatory virtue of her entire beliefs compared with other sets of beliefs she could have. Poston's argument for coherentism involves a defense of the epistemic value of background beliefs, the development of a novel fram…Read more
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150Justification without AwarenessPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 77 (2): 570-573. 2008.No Abstract
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104Foundational Evidentialism and the Problem of ScatterAbstracta 3 (2): 89-106. 2007.This paper addresses the scatter problem for foundational evidentialism. Reflection on the scatter problem uncovers significant epistemological lessons. The scatter problem is evaluated in connection with Ernest Sosa’s use of the problem as an argument against foundational evidentialism. Sosa’s strategy is to consider a strong intuition in favor of internalism—the new evil demon problem, and then illustrate how a foundational evidentialist account of the new evil demon problem succumbs to the sc…Read more
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132Skeptics without bordersAmerican Philosophical Quarterly 47 (3): 223. 2010.Timothy Williamson’s anti luminosity argument has received considerable attention. Escaping unnoticed, though, is a strikingly similar argument from David Hume. This paper highlights some of the arresting parallels between Williamson’s reasoning and Hume’s that will allow us to appreciate more deeply the plausibility of Williamson’s reasoning and to understand how, following Hume, we can extend this reasoning to undermine the “luminosity” of simple necessary truths. More broadly the parallels he…Read more
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449Divine Hiddenness and the Nature of BeliefReligious Studies 43 (2). 2007.In this paper we argue that attention to the intricacies relating to belief illustrate crucial difficulties with Schellenberg's hiddenness argument. This issue has been only tangentially discussed in the literature to date. Yet we judge this aspect of Schellenberg's argument deeply significant. We claim that focus on the nature of belief manifests a central flaw in the hiddenness argument. Additionally, attention to doxastic subtleties provides important lessons about the nature of faith
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469A user's guide to design argumentsReligious Studies 44 (1): 99-110. 2008.We argue that there is a tension between two types of design arguments-the fine-tuning argument (FTA) and the biological design argument (BDA). The tension arises because the strength of each argument is inversely proportional to the value of a certain currently unknown probability. Since the value of that probability is currently unknown, we investigate the properties of the FTA and BDA on different hypothetical values of this probability. If our central claim is correct this suggests three res…Read more
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203Similarity and acquaintance: a dilemmaPhilosophical Studies 147 (3): 369-378. 2010.There is an interesting and instructive problem with Richard Fumerton's acquaintance theory of noninferential justification. Fumerton's explicit account requires acquaintance with the truth-maker of one's belief and yet he admits that one can have noninferential justification when one is not acquainted with the truthmaker of one's belief but instead acquainted with a very similar truth-maker. On the face of it this problem calls for clarification. However, there are skeptical issues lurking in t…Read more
University Of Missouri
Department Of Philosophy
Alumnus
Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| Philosophy of Medicine |
Areas of Interest
| Formal Epistemology |
| Logic and Philosophy of Logic |
| Philosophy of Religion |
PhilPapers Editorships
| Coherentism |
| Coherentism, Misc |
| Epistemology of Specific Domains |