University of St. Andrews
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2016
Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics and Epistemology
Value Theory
  •  44
    Saying and believing: the norm commonality assumption
    Philosophical Studies 176 (8): 1951-1966. 2019.
    One very popular assumption in the epistemological literature is that belief and assertion are governed by one and the same epistemic norm. This paper challenges this claim. Extant arguments in defence of the view are scrutinized and found to rest on value-theoretic inaccuracies. First, the belief-assertion parallel is shown to lack the needed normative strength. Second, I argue that the claim that assertion inherits the norm of belief in virtue of being an expression thereof rests on a failed i…Read more
  •  196
    How to be an anti-reductionist
    Synthese 197 (7): 2849-2866. 2020.
    One popular view in recent years takes the source of testimonial entitlement to reside in the intrinsically social character of testimonial exchanges. This paper looks at two extant incarnations of this view, what we dub ‘weak’ and ‘modest’ social anti-reductionism, and questions the rationales behind their central claims. Furthermore, we put forth an alternative, strong social anti-reductionist account, and show how it does better than the competition on both theoretical and empirical grounds.
  •  232
    Epistemic Trouble for Engineering ‘Woman'
    Logos and Episteme 9 (1): 91-98. 2018.
    This paper puts forth a functionalist difficulty for Sally Haslanger’s proposal for engineering our concept of ‘woman.’ It is argued that the project of bringing about better political function fulfillment cannot get off the ground in virtue of epistemic failure.
  •  148
    Several prominent philosophers assume that the so-called ‘Belief–Assertion Parallel’ warrants epistemic norm correspondence; as such, they argue from the epistemic norm governing one to the epistemic norm governing the other. This paper argues that, in all its readings, the belief–assertion parallel lacks the desired normative import.
  •  223
    Epistemic norms, closure, and no-Belief hinge epistemology
    with Johanna Schnurr and Emma C. Gordon
    Synthese 198 (15): 3553-3564. 2021.
    Recent views in hinge epistemology rely on doxastic normativism to argue that our attitudes towards hinge propositions are not beliefs. This paper has two aims; the first is positive: it discusses the general normative credentials of this move. The second is negative: it delivers two negative results for No-Belief hinge epistemology such construed. The first concerns the motivation for the view: if we’re right, doxastic normativism offers little in the way of theoretical support for the claim th…Read more
  •  119
    A puzzle for epistemic WAMs
    Synthese 196 (11): 4679-4689. 2019.
    In recent literature, a very popular position about the normativity of assertion claims that standards for epistemically proper assertion vary with practical context, while standards for knowledge do not. This paper shows this claim is strongly incompatible with the received value-theoretic view regarding the relationship between the axiological and the deontic: one of the two has to go.
  •  197
    Trustworthy artificial intelligence
    Asian Journal of Philosophy 2 (1): 1-12. 2020.
    This paper develops an account of trustworthy AI. Its central idea is that whether AIs are trustworthy is a matter of whether they live up to their function-based obligations. We argue that this account serves to advance the literature in a couple of important ways. First, it serves to provide a rationale for why a range of properties that are widely assumed in the scientific literature, as well as in policy, to be required of trustworthy AI, such as safety, justice, and explainability, are prop…Read more
  •  86
    Tanesini on truth and epistemic vice
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 67 (2): 762-768. 2024.
    ABSTRACT Alessandra Taniesini's ‘The Mismeasure of the Self’ develops an internalist account of epistemic vice. On this view, epistemic vices are grounded in attitudes towards the self: fatalism, self-satisfaction, narcissistic infatuation, and self-abasement. The account is internalist insofar as it claims to ground both the nature and the normativity of vice within the subject's skull. In this paper, I argue against vice internalism: epistemic vices, I show, need a normative hook outside the s…Read more
  •  181
    What is trustworthiness?
    Noûs 57 (3): 667-683. 2023.
    This paper develops a novel, bifocal account of trustworthiness according to which both trustworthinesssimpliciter(as in ‘Ann is trustworthy’) and trustworthiness tophi(as in ‘Ann is trustworthy when it comes to keeping your secrets’) are analysed in terms of dispositions to fulfil one's obligations. We also offer a systematic account of the relation between the two types of trustworthiness, an account of degrees of trustworthiness and comparative trustworthiness, as well as a view of permissibl…Read more
  •  66
    The Epistemology of Groups
    Philosophical Review 131 (4): 537-541. 2022.
  •  95
    This work is a manifesto for epistemic independence: the independence of good thinking from practical considerations. It presents a functionalist account of the normativity of assertion in conjunction with an integrated view of the normativity of constative speech acts.
  •  116
    The epistemic normativity of conjecture
    Philosophical Studies 179 (11): 3447-3471. 2022.
    This paper has two aims: it develops and defends a fully-fledged account of the epistemic normativity of conjecture it goes sharply against orthodoxy, in arguing that conjecture is epistemically more demanding than assertion. According to the view defended here, one’s conjecture that p is permissible only if one knows that one has warrant, but not sufficient warrant to believe that p. I argue for my account on three independent grounds: the Bach and Harnish account of the nature of communicative…Read more
  •  182
    How to be an infallibilist
    Philosophical Studies 179 (8): 2675-2682. 2022.
    While fallibilism has been the dominant view in epistemology in recent times, the field has witnessed the rise of a new form of infallibilism. In a recent book, Jessica Brown has taken on the task of mounting a systematic defence of fallibilism against this new infallibilism. She argues that new infallibilism incurs several problematic commitments that fallibilism can avoid. In addition, the key data points that infallibilists have adduced in support of their view can be accommodated by fallibil…Read more
  •  89
    Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny
    Philosophical Quarterly 71 (3): 681-684. 2021.
    Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny. By ManneKate.
  •  171
    Knowledge and reasoning
    Synthese 199 (3): 10371-10388. 2021.
    This paper develops a novel, functionalist, unified account of the epistemic normativity of reasoning. On this view, epistemic norms drop out of epistemic functions. I argue that practical reasoning serves a prudential function of generating prudentially permissible action, and the epistemic function of generating knowledge of what one ought to do. This picture, if right, goes a long way towards normatively divorcing action and practical reasoning. At the same time, it unifies reasoning epistemi…Read more
  •  191
    Being Rational and Being Right, by Juan Comesaña
    Mind 131 (523): 1005-1015. 2022.
    Understandably, Tomás is disappointed—but was he irrational in acting as he did? Juan Comesaña’s answer is: obviously not. According to Comesaña, Tomás’s action.
  •  65
    Assertion is the central vehicle for the sharing of knowledge. Whether knowledge is shared successfully often depends on the quality of assertions: good assertions lead to successful knowledge sharing, while bad ones don't. In Sharing Knowledge, Christoph Kelp and Mona Simion investigate the relation between knowledge sharing and assertion, and develop an account of what it is to assert well. More specifically, they argue that the function of assertion is to share knowledge with others. It is th…Read more
  •  58
    No abstract available.
  •  112
    Talk of epistemic dilemmas is old talk in epistemology. But are there such things? In this paper I argue for modest skepticism about epistemic dilemmas. In order to do that, I first point out that not all normative conflicts constitute dilemmas: more needs to be the case. Second, I look into the moral dilemmas literature for inspiration and identify a set of conditions that need to be at work for a mere normative conflict to be a genuine normative dilemma. Last, I argue that, while our epistemic…Read more
  •  110
    Conversational Pressure: Normativity in Speech Exchanges
    Philosophical Quarterly 71 (4). 2021.
    Conversational Pressure: Normativity in Speech Exchanges. By Sanford C. Goldberg. (Oxford: OUP, 2020. Pp. 272. Price £51.75.)
  •  117
    Blame as performance (review)
    Synthese 199 (3): 7595-7614. 2021.
    This paper develops a novel account of the nature of blame: on this account, blame is a species of performance with a constitutive aim. The argument for the claim that blame is an action is speech-act theoretic: it relies on the nature of performatives and the parallelism between mental and spoken blame. I argue that the view scores well on prior plausibility and theoretical fruitfulness, in that: it rests on claims that are widely accepted across sub-disciplines, it explains the normativity of …Read more
  •  512
    Resistance to evidence and the duty to believe
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 108 (1): 203-216. 2023.
    This article develops and defends a full account of the nature and normativity of resistance to evidence, according to which resistance to evidence is an instance of input-level epistemic malfunctioning. At the core of this epistemic normative picture lies the notion of knowledge indicators, as evidential probability increasing facts that one is in a position to know; resistance to evidence is construed as a failure to uptake knowledge indicators.
  •  118
    Social epistemology of education
    In Michael Peters, Paulo Ghiraldelli, Berislav Žarnić, Andrew Gibbons & Tina Besley (eds.), Encyclopaedia of Educational Philosophy and Theory, Springer. 2016.
    No abstract available.
  •  147
    A priori perceptual entitlement, knowledge‐first
    Philosophical Issues 30 (1): 311-323. 2020.
    Tyler Burge notably offers a truth‐first account of perceptual entitlement in terms of a priori necessary representational functions and norms: on his account, epistemic normativity turns on natural norms, which turn on representational functions. This paper has two aims: first, it criticises Tyler Burge's truth‐first a priori derivation on functionalist and value‐theoretic grounds. Second, it develops a novel, knowledge‐first a priori derivation of perceptual entitlement. According to the view …Read more
  •  71
    This chapter develops a novel Neo-Moorean view. The view falls squarely within the Radical Neo-Moorean camp, in that it holds that closure holds unrestrictedly, warrant transmits through Moore’s inference, and that there is nothing wrong – epistemically or dialectically – with Moore’s argument. Nevertheless, the account is superior to extant Radical Neo-Mooreanisms in explanatory power: it explains both the precise variety of epistemic failure exhibited by the sceptic, and the intuition of reaso…Read more
  •  153
    Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny
    The Philosophical Quarterly. forthcoming.
    Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny. By Manne Kate.
  •  733
    Gender, Race & Group Disagreement
    In Fernandfo Broncano-Berrocal & J. Adam Carter (eds.), The epistemology of group disagreement: an introduction, Routledge. pp. 125-138. 2020.
    This paper has two aims. The first is critical: it argues that our mainstream epistemology of disagreement does not have the resources to explain what goes wrong in cases of group-level epistemic injustice. The second is positive: we argue that a functionalist account of group belief and group justification delivers (1) an account of the epistemic peerhood relation between groups that accommodates minority and oppressed groups, and (2), furthermore, diagnoses the epistemic injustice cases corre…Read more
  •  2310
    The Ethics and Epistemology of Trust
    with J. Adam Carter and and
    Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2020.
    Trust is a topic of longstanding philosophical interest. It is indispensable to every kind of coordinated human activity, from sport to scientific research. Even more, trust is necessary for the successful dissemination of knowledge, and by extension, for nearly any form of practical deliberation and planning. Without trust, we could achieve few of our goals and would know very little. Despite trust’s fundamental importance in human life, there is substantial philosophical disagreement about wha…Read more
  •  241
    According to anti‐reductionism in the epistemology of testimony, testimonial entitlement is easy to come by: all you need to do is listen to what you are being told. Say you like anti‐reductionism; one question that you will need to answer is how come testimonial entitlement comes so cheap; after all, people are free to lie.This paper has two aims: first, it looks at the main anti‐reductionist answers to this question and argues that they remain unsatisfactory. Second, it goes on a rescue missio…Read more