•  42
    Pluralism about introspection
    Mind and Language (2): 293-309. 2024.
    If we can and do have some self‐knowledge, how do we acquire it? By examining the ways in which we acquire self‐knowledge—by introspection—we can try shedding some light onto the nature and the breadth of self‐knowledge, as others have tried to do with other forms of knowledge. My aim is to show that introspection involves multiple (that is, at least two) distinct processes, a view I call “pluralism about introspection”. One of the virtues of pluralism is that it explains how we can have such a …Read more
  • There's more to transparency than windows
    In Tamar Szabó Gendler, John Hawthorne & Julianne Chung (eds.), Oxford Studies in Epistemology 7, Oxford University Press. pp. 245-260. 2022.
  •  66
    Modest Nonconceptualism: Epistemology, Phenomenology, and Content
    Philosophical Quarterly 69 (276): 650-653. 2019.
    Modest Nonconceptualism: Epistemology, Phenomenology, and Content. By Schmidt Eva.
  •  51
    Justification Upgrading and the Knowledge Baseline
    Analysis 78 (3): 512-523. 2018.
    In her exciting and thought-provoking book, The Rationality of Perception, Susanna Siegel tackles some bedrock issues concerning the nature and epistemology of perception: its rationality and relation to inference. Examining those issues from the perspective of everyday perception, where our vanity, fears, wishful thinking, general outlook, etc. can influence what we believe ourselves to see, Siegel offers a constructive defence of the claim that ‘both perceptual experiences and the processes by…Read more
  •  110
    Transparency and introspective unification
    Synthese 193 (10). 2016.
    Gareth Evans has observed that one merely needs to ‘look outward’ to discover one’s own beliefs. This observation of what has become known as belief ‘transparency’ has formed a basis for a cluster of views on the nature of introspection. These views may be well suited to account for our introspective access to beliefs, but whether similar transparency-based accounts of our introspective access to mental states other than belief can be given is not obvious. The question of whether a transparency-…Read more
  •  70
    First-person privilege, judgment, and avowal
    Philosophical Explorations 18 (2): 169-182. 2015.
    It is a common intuition that I am in a better position to know my own mental states than someone else's. One view that takes this intuition very seriously is Neo-Expressivism, providing a “non-epistemic” account of first-person privilege. But some have denied that we enjoy any principled first-person privilege, as do those who have the Third-Person View, according to which there is no deep difference in our epistemic position with regard to our own and others' mental states. Despite their appar…Read more