•  27
    Die Rolle des Wissens und des Wissensbegriffs in der Erkenntnistheorie
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 56 (1). 2002.
  •  27
    Ratio, Volume 34, Issue 4, Page 277-285, December 2021.
  •  24
    Plato’s Meno problem is the problem of why knowledge is better than true belief which is not knowledge. The paper studies the account of this surplus value of knowledge that recent reliabilist virtue epistemologists like John Greco and Ernest Sosa have proposed: knowledge is true belief from epistemic virtue. I reconstruct the master argument which subsumes the epistemic case under the general case of success from virtue. Five accounts of virtue are presented and discussed critically. The result…Read more
  •  22
    Could robots be phenomenally conscious?
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 17 (3): 579-590. 2018.
    In a recent book (Tye 2017), Michael Tye argues that we have reason to attribute phenomenal consciousness to functionally similar robots like commander Data of Star Trek. He relies on a kind of inference to the best explanation – ‘Newton’s Rule’, as he calls it. I will argue that Tye’s liberal view of consciousness attribution fails for two reasons. First, it leads into an inconsistency in consciousness attributions. Second, and even more importantly, it fails because ceteris is not paribus. The…Read more
  •  19
    E = K and Non-Epistemic Perception
    Logos and Episteme 9 (3): 307-331. 2018.
    Quite plausibly, epistemic justification and rationality is tied to possession of evidence. According to Williamson, one’s evidence is what one knows. This is not compatible with non-epistemic perception, however, since non-epistemic perception does not require belief in what one perceives and, thus, does not require knowledge of the evidence – and, standardly, knowledge does require belief. If one non-epistemically perceives a piece of evidence, this can be sufficient for possessing it as evide…Read more
  •  18
    This paper will critically engage with Daniel Buckley's argument against “evidential minimalism” (EM), i.e., the claim that necessarily, bits of evidence (are or) provide epistemic reasons for belief. Buckley argues that in some cases, a subject has strong evidence that p (and fulfills further minimal conditions), does not believe p, but nevertheless is not epistemically criticizable and has no epistemic reason to believe p. I will defend EM by pointing out that Buckley's argument trades on an a…Read more
  •  17
    Rational Belief, Reflection, and Undercutting Defeat
    Grazer Philosophische Studien 100 (3): 354-373. 2023.
    Philosophers disagree about the role of reflection for rationality, understood as the capacity to (properly) respond to genuine, normative reasons. Here, ‘reflection’ means the capacity for self-conscious normative meta-cognition. This article develops and rejects a novel argument – the argument from undercutting defeaters – in favor of the ‘one-level view’ that holds that having the concept of a belief (and of a reason) is necessary for responding to reasons. It will be argued that the ‘two-lev…Read more
  •  14
    The presentation defends a fullblooded, 'thick' virtue-theoretic account of epistemic normativity. If we think of beliefs as under the control of rational agents, by means of their rational capacities, the norm of excellence applies to doxastic action as well as any other rational action. An argument is presented to the effect that the knowledge norm is the right norm of belief.
  •  11
    Evolution and Ethics
    Croatian Journal of Philosophy 18 (3): 417-432. 2018.
    This paper is concerned with the reconstruction of a core argument that can be extracted from Street’s ‘Darwinian Dilemma’ and that is intended to ‘debunk’ moral realism by appeal to evolution. The argument, which is best taken to have the form of an undermining defeater argument, fails, I argue. A simple, first formulation is rejected as a non sequitur, due to not distinguishing between the evolutionary process that influences moral attitudes and the cognitive system generating moral attitudes.…Read more
  •  11
    According to a classical causal account of perception, to perceive that object x is F is to fulfill the following conditions: (i) one has an experience as of x's being F, (ii) x is F, and (iii) one's experience of x's being F depends causally on x's being F. This is the core of Grice's causal theory of perception, and it is initially quite plausible (Grice 1961).
  •  1
    Realismus, Robuste Wahrheit Und Kognitive Nötigung
    In Martin Grajner & Adolf Rami (eds.), Wahrheit, Bedeutung, Existenz, Ontos. pp. 41-56. 2010.
  • Concepts (review)
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 55 (1). 2001.
  • Über die Natur von Tatsachen
    Philosophia Naturalis 42 (2): 313-340. 2005.
  • Ten Problems of Consciousness (review)
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 53 (1). 1999.
  • Anatomie der Subejktivität (edited book)
    with Thomas Grundmann, Catrin Misselhorn, and Veronique Zanetti
    suhrkamp. 2005.
  • Egozentrizität und Mystik (review)
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 61 (1). 2007.
  • Ten Problems of Consciousness (review)
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 52 (4). 1998.
  • Kripkes und Chalmers' Argumente gegen den Materialismus
    Philosophia Naturalis 40 (1): 55-81. 2003.