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Krinostic InjusticePhilosophical Quarterly 75 (4): 1388-1409. 2025.This paper articulates a kind of epistemic injustice in respect of judgement. I dub it ‘krinostic injustice’ (in Ancient Greek, the verb ϰϱίνω means ‘to decide’). It illuminates a phenomenon in which a hearer believes a speaker’s testimonies insofar as they constitute what I call ‘basic’ reports, such as recollections of a series of events, but disbelieves the speaker’s testimony concerning the characterisation of their experience. To motivate the distinction between basic reports and characteri…Read more
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Inquiry for the Mistaken and ConfusedPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 109 (3): 962-985. 2024.Various philosophers have recently defended norms of inquiry which forbid inquiry into questions which lack true answers. I argue that these norms are overly restrictive, and that they fail to capture an important relationship between inquiry and our position as non-ideal epistemic agents. I defend a more flexible and forgiving norm: Epistemic Improvement. According to this norm, inquiry into a question is permissible only if it’s not rational for one to be sure that by inquiring one won’t impro…Read more
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Attunement: On the Cognitive Virtues of AttentionIn Mark Alfano, Jeroen De Ridder & Colin Klein (eds.), Social Virtue Epistemology, Routledge. 2022.I motivate three claims: Firstly, attentional traits can be cognitive virtues and vices. Secondly, groups and collectives can possess attentional virtues and vices. Thirdly, attention has epistemic, moral, social, and political importance. An epistemology of attention is needed to better understand our social-epistemic landscape, including media, social media, search engines, political polarisation, and the aims of protest. I apply attentional normativity to undermine recent arguments for moral …Read more
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Rejecting Pereboom’s empirical objection to agent-causationSynthese 194 (8): 3085-3100. 2017.In this paper I argue that Pereboom’s empirical objection to agent causation fails to undermine the most plausible version of agent-causal libertarianism. This is significant because Pereboom concedes that such libertarianism is conceptually coherent and only falls to empirical considerations. To substantiate these claims I outline Pereboom’s taxonomy of agent-causal views, develop the strongest version of his empirical objections, and then show that this objection fails to undermine what I cons…Read more
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Risky Inquiry: Developing an Ethics for Philosophical PracticeHypatia 38 275-293. 2023.Philosophical inquiry strives to be the unencumbered exploration of ideas. That is, unlike scientific research which is subject to ethical oversight, it is commonly thought that it would either be inappropriate, or that it would undermine what philosophy fundamentally is, if philosophical research were subject to similar ethical oversight. Against this, I argue that philosophy is in need of a reckoning. Philosophical inquiry is a morally hazardous practice with its own risks. There are risks pre…Read more
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Hermeneutical Injustice: Distortion and Conceptual AptnessHypatia 37 (2): 343-363. 2022.This article develops a new approach for theorizing about hermeneutical injustice. According to a dominant view, hermeneutical injustice results from a hermeneutical gap: one lacks the conceptual tools needed to make sense of, or to communicate, important social experience, where this lack is a result of an injustice in the background social methods used to determine hermeneutical resources. I argue that this approach is incomplete. It fails to capture an important species of hermeneut…Read more
APA Eastern Division
Knoxville, TN, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Social Epistemology |
| Feminist Philosophy |
| Epistemology |
Areas of Interest
| Religious Studies |
| Applied Ethics |
| Feminist Philosophy of Science |