• Hope College
    Department of Philosophy
    Assistant Professor of Philosophy Instruction
Holland, Michigan, United States of America
  •  129
    Suppose that, in most domains of belief, our basic commitments are warranted not evidentially but pragmatically. Is that good news for efforts to warrant theistic commitment? Not obviously, I argue by way of a critique of several recent existential arguments for theism. It’s unclear that theistic commitment is a necessary, or even viable, means of gaining supernatural goods like cosmic meaning or a happy afterlife. And it’s unclear that this-worldly (putative) goods it arguably underpins—in part…Read more
  •  188
    The Myth of the Given
    In Jeremy Randel Koons (ed.), The Sellarsian Mind, Routledge. forthcoming.
    In this chapter, Klemick offers an interpretation of the essence of the (in)famous "Myth of the Given." He argues that the Myth's fundamental form is the claim that mere awareness of an object could directly yield representational content, suggesting that Sellars rejected this claim as an unacceptable expression of psychologism (a mistake, as Sellars remarks, akin to the naturalistic fallacy in ethics). Noting the epistemological considerations typically used to motivate the Myth, Klemick also s…Read more
  •  1067
    Charles Sanders Peirce has commonly been interpreted as a proponent of an epistemic theory of truth. Such a theory has the apparent advantage of directly undercutting radical skepticism, but the disadvantage of implausibly entailing that there are no truths concerning irretrievably lost facts. Recently Andrew Howat has defended Peirce’s epistemic constraint on truth by recasting Peirce’s claim that all truths would be believed following sufficient inquiry, not as constitutive of truth, but as a …Read more
  •  781
    Sellars's Two Responses to Skepticism
    Synthese 205 (18): 1-25. 2025.
    This paper offers a critical interpretation and evaluation of Wilfrid Sellars’s treatment of skepticism about empirical justification. It defends three central claims. First, against the suggestion that Sellars’s work simply bypasses traditional skeptical problems, I make the novel interpretive claim that Sellars not only addresses skepticism about empirical justification, but offers two independent (albeit sketchy) arguments against it: a transcendental argument that the likely truth of our per…Read more
  •  841
    Sellars was an inferentialist about meaning. He thus effectively accorded modality a categorial function, maintaining that any meaningful assertion involves implicit commitment to rules of material inference, which modal propositions explicitly endorse. But Sellars was also a modal anti-realist, construing modality as “entirely immanent to thought” (LRB §40), not present in the world an sich. These two commitments, Klemick argues, render it impossible in principle for us to describe the world an…Read more
  •  772
    Pragmatist responses to skepticism about empirical justification have mostly been underwhelming, either presupposing implausible theses like relativism or anti-realism, or else showing our basic empirical beliefs to be merely psychologically inevitable rather than rationally warranted. In this paper I defend a better one: a modified version of an argument by Wilfrid Sellars that we are pragmatically warranted in accepting that our perceptual beliefs are likely to be true, since their likely trut…Read more
  •  800
    Constitution, Causation, and the Final Opinion: A Puzzle in Peirce's Illustrations
    History of Philosophy Quarterly 40 (3): 237-257. 2023.
    In “The Fixation of Belief,” Peirce apparently accepts the causal claim that real physical objects cause us to reach an indefeasible “final opinion” concerning them. In “How to Make Our Ideas Clear,” he apparently accepts the constitutive claim that for physical objects to be real just is for them to be represented in that opinion. These claims initially seem inconsistent, since causal claims are explanatory and since equivalent claims cannot explain one another. Contrary to prominent suggestion…Read more
  •  1274
    Phenomenalism, Skepticism, and Sellars's Account of Intentionality
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 30 (5): 548-558. 2022.
    I take up two questions raised by Luz Christopher Seiberth's meticulous reconstruction of Wilfrid Sellars's theory of intentionality. The first is whether we should regard Sellars as a transcendental phenomenalist in the most interesting sense of the term: as denying that even an ideally adequate conceptual structure would enable us to represent worldly objects as they are in themselves. I agree with Seiberth that the answer is probably yes, but I suggest that this is due not to Sellars's reject…Read more
  •  1347
    Sellars's Core Critique of C. I. Lewis: Against the Equation of Aboutness with Givenness
    Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie (1): 106-136. 2022.
    Many have taken Sellars’s critique of empiricism in “Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind” (EPM) to be aimed at his teacher C. I. Lewis. But if so, why do the famous arguments of its opening sections carry so little force against Lewis’s views? Understandably, some respond by denying that Lewis’s epistemology is among the positions targeted by Sellars. But this is incorrect. Indeed, Sellars had earlier offered more trenchant (if already familiar) critiques of Lewis’s epistemology. What is origi…Read more
  •  1226
    C. I. Lewis was a Foundationalist After All
    History of Philosophy Quarterly 37 (1): 77-99. 2020.
    While C. I. Lewis was traditionally interpreted as an epistemological foundationalist throughout his major works, virtually every recent treatment of Lewis's epistemology dissents. But the traditional interpretation is correct: Lewis believed that apprehensions of "the given" are certain independently of support from, and constitute the ultimate warrant for, objective empirical beliefs. This interpretation proves surprisingly capable of accommodating apparently contrary textual evidence. The non…Read more
  •  1106
    Sellars’ metaethical quasi-realism
    Synthese 197 (5): 2215-2243. 2020.
    In this article, I expound and defend an interpretation of Sellars as a metaethical quasi-realist. Sellars analyzes moral discourse in non-cognitivist terms: in particular, he analyzes “ought”-statements as expressions of collective intentions deriving from a collective commitment to provide for the general welfare. But he also endorses a functional-role theory of meaning, on which a statement’s meaning is grounded in its being governed by semantical rules concerning language entry, intra-lingui…Read more