•  1
    The Positive Argument for Impermissivism
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Epistemic impermissivism is the view that there is never more than one doxastic attitude it is rational to have in response to one's total evidence. Epistemic permissivism is the denial of this claim. The debate between the permissivist and the impermissivist has proceeded, in large part, by way of 'negative' arguments that highlight the unattractiveness of the opposing position. In light of the deadlock that has ensued, this paper has two aims. The first is to introduce the concept of a 'po…Read more
  •  225
    Conditionalization
    In Jonathan Dancy & Ernest Sosa Matthias Steup Kurt Sylvan (ed.), Blackwell Companion to Epistemology, Third Edition, Wiley-blackwell. forthcoming.
  •  247
    Time-Slice Epistemology for Bayesians
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Recently, some have challenged the idea that there are genuine norms of diachronic rationality. Part of this challenge has involved offering replacements for diachronic principles. Skeptics about diachronic rationality believe that we can provide an error theory for it by appealing to synchronic updating rules that, over time, mimic the behavior of diachronic norms. In this paper, I argue that the most promising attempts to develop this position within the Bayesian framework are unsuccessful. I …Read more
  •  378
    Moral Encroachment and Positive Profiling
    Erkenntnis 1-21. forthcoming.
    Some claim that moral factors affect the epistemic status of our beliefs. Call this the moral encroachment thesis. It’s been argued that the moral encroachment thesis can explain at least part of the wrongness of racial profiling. The thesis predicts that the high moral stakes in cases of racial profiling make it more difficult for these racist beliefs to be justified or to constitute knowledge. This paper considers a class of racial generalizations that seem to do just the opposite of this. The…Read more
  •  381
    Bayesian coherentism
    Synthese 198 (10): 9563-9590. 2020.
    This paper considers a problem for Bayesian epistemology and proposes a solution to it. On the traditional Bayesian framework, an agent updates her beliefs by Bayesian conditioning, a rule that tells her how to revise her beliefs whenever she gets evidence that she holds with certainty. In order to extend the framework to a wider range of cases, Jeffrey (1965) proposed a more liberal version of this rule that has Bayesian conditioning as a special case. Jeffrey conditioning is a rule that tells …Read more
  •  131
    Commutativity, Normativity, and Holism: Lange Revisited
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 50 (2): 159-173. 2020.
    Lange (2000) famously argues that although Jeffrey Conditionalization is non-commutative over evidence, it’s not defective in virtue of this feature. Since reversing the order of the evidence in a sequence of updates that don’t commute does not reverse the order of the experiences that underwrite these revisions, the conditions required to generate commutativity failure at the level of experience will fail to hold in cases where we get commutativity failure at the level of evidence. If our inter…Read more
  •  50
    Higher-Order Beliefs and the Undermining Problem for Bayesianism
    Acta Analytica 34 (2): 197-213. 2019.
    Jonathan Weisberg has argued that Bayesianism’s rigid updating rules make Bayesian updating incompatible with undermining defeat. In this paper, I argue that when we attend to the higher-order beliefs we must ascribe to agents in the kinds of cases Weisberg considers, the problem he raises disappears. Once we acknowledge the importance of higher-order beliefs to the undermining story, we are led to a different understanding of how these cases arise. And on this different understanding of things,…Read more