•  7
    Radical Holism and Disagreement
    In José Luis Bermúdez, Matheus Valente & Víctor M. Verdejo (eds.), Sharing Thoughts: Philosophical Perspectives on Intersubjectivity and Communication, Oxford University Press. pp. 312-332. 2025.
    Traditional accounts of disagreement require that different subjects can entertain the same propositional contents. For most views of mental content, this ‘shared content’ approach seems an obvious choice. However, for the radical holist, this framework is problematic: the holist claims that different subjects cannot, in practice, share thoughts. This paper has two aims. The first is to suggest an account of agreement and disagreement for the holist, which treats both agreement and disagreement …Read more
  •  57
    Epistemic Bubbles and Contextual Discordance
    Philosophy 99 (3): 437-459. 2024.
    Recent work in social epistemology has drawn attention to various problematic social epistemic phenomena that are common within online networks. Nguyen (2020) argues that it is important to distinguish epistemic bubbles from echo chambers. An epistemic bubble is an information structure that merely lacks information or sources that would be relevant or important to the user. An echo chamber is a structure in which dissenting opinions are, not necessarily absent, but actively undermined, for exam…Read more
  •  143
    Testimonial knowledge and content preservation
    Philosophical Studies 180 (10): 3073-3097. 2023.
    Most work in the epistemology of testimony is built upon a simple model of communication according to which, when the speaker asserts that p, the hearer must recover this very content, p. In this paper, I argue that this ‘Content Preservation Model’ of communication cannot bear the weight placed on it by contemporary work on testimony. It is popularly thought that testimonial exchanges are often successful such that we gain a great deal of knowledge through testimony. In addition, the testimonia…Read more
  •  1
    Context and communicative success
    In Tadeusz Ciecierski & Pawel Grabarczyk (eds.), The Architecture of Context and Context-Sensitivity, Springer. 2020.
    Traditional accounts of the conditions on communicative success are invariantist. For example, some authors claim that, for communication to succeed, a hearer must always grasp the very content that the speaker expressed with her utterance; others claim that success is always proportional to the degree to which the hearer understands this content. In this paper, I argue that these invariantist approaches cannot offer a comprehensive account of communicative success. When we attempt to communicat…Read more
  •  142
    Content internalism and testimonial knowledge
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 67 (6): 1947-1968. 2024.
    It is commonly assumed that content preservation is required for success in testimonial exchanges. Many content internalists, however, cannot endorse this assumption. They must claim instead that testimonial exchanges can often succeed when the content grasped by the hearer is not the content of the speaker’s testimony, p, but some merely similar content, p*. Goldberg (2007. Anti-Individualism: Mind and Language, Knowledge and Justification. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) argues that thi…Read more
  •  129
    Linguistic Understanding and Testimonial Warrant
    Erkenntnis 88 (2): 457-477. 2021.
    How much linguistic understanding is required for testimonial knowledge acquisition? One answer is that, so long as we grasp the content expressed by the speaker, it does not matter if our understanding of it is poor. Call this the ‘Liberal View’ of testimony. This approach looks especially promising when combined with the thesis that we share a public language that makes it easy to grasp the right content. In this paper, I argue that this picture is epistemically problematic. Poor linguistic un…Read more
  •  160
    Conceptual engineering and semantic deference
    Studia Philosophica Estonica 12 81-98. 2019.
    Many ameliorative projects aim at moral goods such as social equality. For example, the amelioration of the concept MARRIAGE forms part of efforts to achieve equal rights for the LGBT+ community. What does implementation of such an ameliorated concept consist in? In this paper, I argue that, for some ameliorated concepts, successful implementation requires that individuals eschew semantic deference, at least with respect to relevant dimensions of the concept. My argument appeals to consideration…Read more
  •  135
    Content internalism and conceptual engineering
    Synthese 198 (12): 11587-11605. 2020.
    Cappelen proposes a radically externalist framework for conceptual engineering. This approach embraces the following two theses. Firstly, the mechanisms that underlie conceptual engineering are inscrutable: they are too complex, unstable and non-systematic for us to grasp. Secondly, the process of conceptual engineering is largely beyond our control. One might think that these two theses are peculiar to the Austerity Framework, or to metasemantic externalism more generally. However, Cappelen arg…Read more
  •  143
    Holism, conceptual role, and conceptual similarity
    Philosophical Psychology 33 (3): 396-420. 2020.
    Holistic views of content claim that we each speak and think in distinct and idiosyncratic idiolects: although we may often entertain thoughts with similar contents, the content of our thoughts can...
  •  171
    Social externalism and the problem of communication
    Philosophical Studies 172 (12): 3229-3251. 2015.
    Social externalism must allow that subjects can misunderstand the content of their own thoughts. I argue that we can exploit this commitment to create a dilemma for the view’s account of communication. To arrive at the first horn of the dilemma, I argue that, on social externalism, it is understanding which is the measure of communicative success. This would be a highly revisionary account of communication. The only way that the social externalist can salvage the claim that mental content is cen…Read more
  •  187
    Assertion: New Philosophical Essays, edited by Jessica Brown and Herman Cappelen (review)
    with Allan Hazlett and Robin McKenna
    Mind 121 (483): 784-788. 2012.