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823A virtue epistemology: Apt belief and reflective knowledge, volume I • by Ernest SosaAnalysis 69 (2): 382-385. 2007.Ernest Sosa's A Virtue Epistemology, Vol. I is arguably the single-most important monograph to be published in analytic epistemology in the last ten years. Sosa, the first in the field to employ the notion of intellectual virtue – in his ground-breaking ‘The Raft and the Pyramid’– is the leading proponent of reliabilist versions of virtue epistemology. In A Virtue Epistemology, he deftly defends an externalist account of animal knowledge as apt belief, argues for a distinction between animal and…Read more
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On Practical Inference with an Excursus on Theoretical InferenceLogique Et Analyse 13 (49): 213. 1970.
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68Knowledge and JustificationPhilosophie Et Culture: Actes du XVIIe Congrès Mondial de Philosophie 5 367-372. 1988.
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55Mind-Body Interaction and Supervenient CausationPhilosophie Et Culture: Actes du XVIIe Congrès Mondial de Philosophie 5 33-43. 1988.
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220Serious Philosophy and Freedom of SpiritJournal of Philosophy 84 (12): 707. 1987.I wish to lay out a view of “serious” philosophy, and to consider recent attacks on that view from the side of the “free spirited” philosophy: deconstruction and textualism, hermeneutics, critical theory, and the new pragma-tism. Without defining what all forms of freedom have in common, I shall draw from them a combined critique against seriousness. I will also examine, occasionally and in passing, positive ideas conjured up by the free. But mainly I wish to consider their combined critique of …Read more
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19Chapter six. Propositional ExperienceIn Knowing Full Well, Princeton University Press. pp. 108-127. 2010.
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47On practical inference, with an excursus on theoretical inferenceLogique Et Analyse 13 (49): 215-230. 1970.
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1The Raft and the Pyramid.'French, PA, Uehling Jr, TE and Wettstein, HKIn Peter A. French, Theodore Edward Uehling & Howard K. Wettstein (eds.), Studies in epistemology, University of Minnesota Press. 1980.
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Standard ConditionsIn Sören Halldén (ed.), Modality, morality and other problems of sense and nonsense, Gleerup. pp. 115. 1973.
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31What is a Logical Constant?In Robert S. Cohen & Marx W. Wartofsky (eds.), Methodological and historical essays in the natural and social sciences, Reidel. pp. 253--256. 1974.
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The raftandthe pyramidIn Duncan Pritchard & Ram Neta (eds.), Arguing About Knowledge, Routledge. pp. 273. 2008.
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79On the “content” and “relevance” of information-theoretic epistemologyBehavioral and Brain Sciences 6 (1): 79-81. 1983.
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132Moral Relativism, Cognitivism and Defeasible RulesSocial Philosophy and Policy 11 (1): 116-138. 1994.Naturalism rejects a sui generis and fundamental realm of the evaluative or normative. Thought and talk about the good and the right must hence be understood without appeal to any such evaluative or normative concepts or properties. In Sections I and II, we see noncognitivism step forward with its account of evaluative and normative language as fundamentally optative or prescriptive. Prescriptivism falls afoul of several problems. Prominent among them below is the “problem of prima facie reasons…Read more
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39Vincent A. Tomas 1916-1995Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 69 (5). 1996.
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39Essays on the Philosophy of George Berkeley (edited book)D. Reidel. 1986.A tercentenary conference of March, 1985, drew to Newport, Rhode Island, nearly all the most distinguished Berkeley scholars now active. The conference was organized by the International Berkeley Society, with the support of several institutions and many people. This volume represents a selection of the lead papers deliv ered at that conference, most now revised. The Cartesian marriage of Mind and Body has proved an uneasy union. Each side has claimed supremacy and usurped the rights of the othe…Read more
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Consciousness of the Self and the PresentIn James E. Tomberlin (ed.), Agent, Language, and the Structure of the World: Essays Presented to Hector-Neri Castaneda With His Replies, Hackett. pp. 131-47. 1983.
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42External realism and philosophy in transitionJournal of Social Philosophy 22 (1): 183-186. 1991.This paper was written for a panel session, in which I was asked to represent an analytic perspective. On reflection I found that there is no such thing, however, and that what best unifies the analytic traditions is not even a set of questions, much less a set of answers, but only agreement on certain standards of clarity and argumentation, and an interest in dialectic and debate. Certain issues have long dominated the analytic agenda, it is true, and I see no better way to represent an analyti…Read more
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99Situations against virtues : the situationist attack on virtue theoryIn Chrysostomos Mantzavinos (ed.), Philosophy of the social sciences: philosophical theory and scientific practice, Cambridge University Press. pp. 274--290. 2009.
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259Metaphysics: An Anthology, 2nd Edition (edited book)Wiley-Blackwell. 2011.Thoroughly updated, the second edition of this highly successful textbook continues to represent the most comprehensive and authoritative collection of canonical readings in metaphysics. In addition to updated material from the first edition, it presents entirely new sections on ontology and the metaphysics of material objects.
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49Experience and the Objects of PerceptionReview of Metaphysics 39 (1): 142-143. 1985.This study aims primarily at an account of sensory experience and perception uncommitted to objectual sense data or sense impressions. In the end it does make room for sense impressions, but only as entities somehow abstracted from phenomenological attention to sense experience. The "phenomenological standpoint" is attained by imagining "that a transparent screen has been placed at right angles about three feet from your eyes between you and all the objects before you," and by imagining further …Read more
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1013Reflective Knowledge in the Best CirclesJournal of Philosophy 94 (8): 410. 1997.According to Moore, his argument meets three conditions for being a proof: first, the premiss is different from the conclusion; second, he knows the premiss to be the case; and, third, the conclusion follows deductively.2 Further conditions may be required, but he evidently thinks his proof would satisfy these as well. As Moore is well aware, many philosophers will feel he has not given “...any satisfactory proof of the point in question."3 Some, he believes, will want the premiss itself proved.…Read more
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248Knowing Full WellPrinceton University Press. 2010.In this book, Ernest Sosa explains the nature of knowledge through an approach originated by him years ago, known as virtue epistemology. Here he provides the first comprehensive account of his views on epistemic normativity as a form of performance normativity on two levels. On a first level is found the normativity of the apt performance, whose success manifests the performer's competence. On a higher level is found the normativity of the meta-apt performance, which manifests not necessarily f…Read more