•  1224
    Disagreement and Evidential Attenuation
    Noûs 47 (4): 767-794. 2013.
    What sort of doxastic response is rational to learning that one disagrees with an epistemic peer who has evaluated the same evidence? I argue that even weak general recommendations run the risk of being incompatible with a pair of real epistemic phenomena, what I call evidential attenuation and evidential amplification. I focus on a popular and intuitive view of disagreement, the equal weight view. I take it to state that in cases of peer disagreement, a subject ought to end up equally confident…Read more
  •  72
    Davidson's Triangulation: Content‐Endowing Causes and Circularity
    with Tomá[Sbreve] Marvan
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 12 (2): 177-195. 2004.
    In this article we aim to reconstruct some aspects of Davidson's idea of triangulation, and against this reconstruction, ask whether the idea is viciously circular. We begin by looking at the claim that without a triangularn setting, there is no saying what the cause of a being's responses is. In the first section we discuss the notion of relevant similarity, and what difference the presence of a second non‐linguistic being could make for the individuation of a common focus of attention. In the …Read more