Benjamin McCraw

University Of South Carolina Upstate
  •  931
    Virtue epistemology, testimony, and trust
    Logos and Episteme 5 (1): 95-102. 2014.
    In this paper, I respond to an objection raised by Duncan Pritchard and Jesper Kallestrup against virtue epistemology. In particular, they argue that the virtue epistemologist must either deny that S knows that p only if S believes that p because of S’s virtuous operation or deny that intuitive cases of testimonial knowledge. Their dilemma has roots in the apparent ease by which we obtain testimonial knowledge and, thus, how the virtue epistemologist can explain such knowledge in a way that both…Read more
  •  28
    Brian Leftow, God and Necessity , ix + 575 pp., £60.00 (review)
    Ratio 28 (1): 112-118. 2014.
  •  87
    Recent Objections to Perfect Knowledge and Classical Approaches to Omniscience
    Philosophy and Theology 28 (1): 259-270. 2016.
    Patrick Grim and Einar Duenger Bohn have recently argued that there can be no perfectly knowing Being. In particular, they urge that the object of omniscience is logically absurd (Grim) or requires an impossible maximal point of all knowledge (Bohn). I argue that, given a more classical notion of omniscience found in Aquinas and Augustine, we can shift the focus of perfect knowledge from what that being must know to the mode of that being’s understanding. Since Grim and Bohn focus on the object …Read more