•  533
    Belief States in Criminal Law
    Oklahoma Law Review 68. 2015.
    Belief-state ascription — determining what someone “knew,” “believed,” was “aware of,” etc. — is central to many areas of law. In criminal law, the distinction between knowledge and recklessness, and the use of broad jury instructions concerning other belief states, presupposes a common and stable understanding of what those belief-state terms mean. But a wealth of empirical work at the intersection of philosophy and psychology — falling under the banner of “Experimental Epistemology” — reveals …Read more
  • Modern physiological Research
    Scientia 28 (55): 422. 1934.