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InnocenceFaith and Philosophy 29 (2): 125-143. 2012.There are at least five types of innocence. Innocence of various, but not all, types can be possessed, then lost, and later still regained or even surpassed. The most important of these I call “mature innocence,” which is a confirmed state of character, attained reflectively and by an individual’s exercise of effort and agency, that is highly resistant to sin and moral wrongdoing. Mature innocence can be either a secular or a specifically Christian ideal. To surpass mature innocence is to attain…Read more
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Explaining Knowledge: New Essays on the Gettier Problem (edited book)Oxford University Press. 2017.
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Replies to Weatherson, Chalmers, Weinberg, and BengsonPhilosophical Studies 171 (3): 577-600. 2014.Reply to criticsThe replies in this symposium are some of the most insightful contributions to contemporary metaphilosophy I have read. I wish I had seen them before I wrote Philosophy without Intuitions . It would have made it a better book. I also wish I had space to explore all the important issues raised, but unfortunately, the focus here will have to be on points of disagreement. The replies build on each other—I draw on material from the earlier replies in the later ones. It is possible to…Read more
Greenville, NC, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Metaphysics and Epistemology |
History of Western Philosophy |