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12Why Only Evidential Considerations Can Justify BeliefIn Conor McHugh, Jonathan Way & Daniel Whiting (eds.), Normativity: Epistemic and Practical, Oxford University Press. pp. 179-199. 2018.At least when we restrict our attention to the epistemic domain, it seems clear that only considerations which bear on whether _p_ can render a subject’s belief that _p_ epistemically justified, by constituting the reasons on the basis of which she believes that _p_. And we ought to expect any account of epistemic normativity to explain why this is so. Extant accounts generally appeal to the idea that belief aims at truth, in an effort to explain why there is a kind of evidential constraint on t…Read more
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93Epistemic Norms: What are they? Why do they matter?Philosophical Topics 51 (2): 9-31. 2023.At a first approximation, conforming with epistemic norms involves properly or appropriately forming and revising one’s doxastic attitudes on the basis of and in response to one’s particular epistemicposition. But, of course, this intuitively attractive construal is little more than a starting point for theorizing. A fully developed account of epistemic norms will need to spell out which sort(s) of doxastic response to a given epistemic position are appropriate or proper and which are not. This …Read more
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61A victory (of what sort) for strict purist invariantism? Some reflections on Gerken’s On folk epistemology: how we think and talk about knowledgeInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 68 (10): 4183-4201. 2025.Gerken's On Folk Epistemology: How we think and talk about knowledge develops and defends strict purist invariantism about knowledge. Along the way, Gerken argues that less-orthodox competitors to strict purist invariantism are plagued by certain heretofore unrecognized or underappreciated difficulties. Given Gerken's own explicit methodological commitments, this defensive component of the book's project is dialectically crucial. By Gerken's own lights, we ought to be persuaded to embrace strict…Read more
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125Epistemically flawless false beliefsSynthese 198 (12): 11291-11309. 2020.A starting point for the sort of alethic epistemological approach that dominates both historical and contemporary western philosophy is that epistemic norms, standards, or ideals are to be characterized by appeal to some kind of substantively normative relationship between belief and truth. Accordingly, the alethic epistemologist maintains that false beliefs are necessarily defective, imperfect, or flawed, at least from the epistemic perspective. In this paper, I develop an action-oriented alter…Read more
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171Epistemic norms, all things consideredSynthese 198 (7): 6717-6737. 2019.An action-oriented epistemology takes the idea that our capacity for belief subserves our capacity for action as the starting point for epistemological theorizing. This paper argues that an action-oriented epistemology is especially well-positioned to explain why it is that, at least for believers like us, whether or not conforming with the epistemic norms that govern belief-regulation would lead us to believe that p always bears on whether we have normative reasons to believe that p. If the arg…Read more
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1070Another kind of pragmatic encroachmentIn Brian Kim & Matthew McGrath (eds.), Pragmatic Encroachment in Epistemology, Routledge. 2018.
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142Moral Agency in BelievingPhilosophical Topics 46 (1): 53-74. 2018.Ordinary moral practice suggests that our beliefs, themselves, can wrong. But when one moral subject wrongs another, it must be something that the first subject, herself, does or brings about which constitutes the wronging: wronging involves exercising moral agency. So, if we can wrong others simply by believing, then believing involves an exercise or expression of moral agency. Unfortunately, it is not at all obvious how our beliefs could manifest our moral agency. After all, we are not capable…Read more
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99Functional belief and judgmental beliefSynthese 197 (12): 5301-5317. 2017.A division between functional belief, on the one hand, and judgmental belief, on the other, is central to Sosa’s two-tier virtue epistemology. For Sosa, mere functional belief is constituted by a first-order affirmation. In contrast, a judgmental belief is an intentional affirmation; a performance which is partially constituted by the believer’s endeavor to affirm truthfully, and reliably enough. If, qua performance, judgmental belief is like the hunter’s shot or the baseball player’s swing, mer…Read more
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299How to be a Normativist about the Nature of BeliefPacific Philosophical Quarterly 96 (2): 181-204. 2015.According to the normativist, it is built into the nature of belief itself that beliefs are subject to a certain set of norms. I argue here that only a normativist account can explain certain non‐normative facts about what it takes to have the capacity for belief. But this way of defending normativism places an explanatory burden on any normativist account that an account on which a truth norm is explanatorily fundamental simply cannot discharge. I develop an alternative account that can achieve…Read more
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185Why is Epistemic Evaluation Prescriptive?Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 57 (1): 97-121. 2014.Epistemic evaluation is often appropriately prescriptive in character because believers are often capable of exercising some kind of control—call it doxastic control—over the way in which they regulate their beliefs. An intuitively appealing and widely endorsed account of doxastic control—the immediate causal impact account—maintains that a believer exercises doxastic control when her judgments about how she ought to regulate her beliefs in a particular set of circumstances can cause the believe…Read more
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211Which Mental States Are Rationally Evaluable, And Why?Philosophical Issues 25 (1): 41-63. 2015.What makes certain mental states subject to evaluation with respect to norms of rationality and justification, and others arational? In this paper, I develop and defend an account that explains why belief is governed by, and so appropriately subject to, evaluation with respect to norms of rationality and justification, one that does justice to the complexity of our evaluative practice in this domain. Then, I sketch out a way of extending the account to explain when and why other kinds of mental …Read more
Burlington, Vermont, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Normativity |
| Meta-Ethics |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Action |