•  22
    Skepticism and the Ordinary Position
    International Journal for the Study of Skepticism. forthcoming.
    In his book How to Take Skepticism Seriously, Adam Leite observes that in ordinary life we proceed under the assumption of “epistemic asymmetry”: the principle that we are permitted to draw on knowledge that we wouldn’t have were the counterpossibilities that threaten our knowledge true in order to rule out those very counterpossibilities. Leite argues that epistemic asymmetry allows us to rule out the skeptical possibilities, and further, that it allows us to do so even if we accept the view th…Read more
  •  14
    Cartesian Skepticism, Kantian Skepticism, and Two Conceptions of Self-Consciousness
    In Sofia Miguens (ed.), The Logical Alien, Harvard University Press. pp. 145-169. 2019.
  •  1
    C.I. Lewis on the intersubjective and the constitution of objectivity
    In Quentin Kammer, Jean-Philippe Narboux & Henri Wagner (eds.), C.I. Lewis: the a priori and the given, Routledge. 2021.
  •  1074
    Stanley Cavell on What We Say
    Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 9 (9). 2021.
    In his early essay, “Must We Mean What We Say”, Cavell argues that the claims of ordinary language philosophers regarding “what we say when” are not empirical generalizations about a given group of speakers but are rather to be understood as measuring the limits of what counts as a coherent act of thinking and speaking. Cavell’s charge against the skeptic about the external world is that he seeks to think and speak beyond these limits. In this paper I compare Cavell’s response to the skeptic to …Read more
  •  61
    Review of Fiona Hughes, Kant's Aesthetic Epistemology: Form and World (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (8). 2009.
  •  184
    In Search of the Plain and the Philosophical
    International Journal for the Study of Skepticism 4 (3-4): 189-224. 2014.
    In this paper, I take up Thompson Clarke’s distinction between “philosophical” and “plain” ways of understanding a question that could be expressed with the words, “how do you know…?” Clarke argues that this distinction has two important implications. First, philosophical skepticism would stand in an “indirect” relation with its “plain” counterparts, so that what the philosopher is examining is not, as it might initially seem, a plain claim to know, but rather what Clarke calls “philosophical co…Read more