Mahdi Ranaee

Universität Siegen
  •  168
    Al-Gazali, Descartes, and Their Sceptical Problems
    Maimonides Review of Philosophy and Religion. forthcoming.
    This paper will offer a systematic reconstruction of al-Ġazālī’s Sceptical Argument in his celebrated Deliverer/Delivered from Going Astray (al-Munqiḏ/al-Munqaḏ min al-Ḍalāl). Based on textual evidence, I will argue that the concept of certainty (yaqīn) in play in this argument is that of the philosophers—most notably Ibn Sīnā—and that it is firmly tied to demonstration (burhān) and hence to the materials of syllogism (mawwād al-qiyās). This will show that contrary to what many scholars believe,…Read more
  •  48
    Non-Accidentally Factive Mental States
    Dialogue 55 (3): 493-510. 2016.
    I offer a counterexample to Timothy Williamson’s conjecture that knowledge is the most general factive mental state; i.e., that every factive mental state entails knowledge. I describe two counterexamples (Ernest Sosa’s and Baron Reed’s) that I find unpersuasive, and argue that they fail due to a specific feature they have in common. I then argue that there is a primitive mental state that is factive but does not entail knowledge, and that constitutes a counterexample to Williamson’s conjecture …Read more
  •  44
    The very title of Karin de Boer’s latest book Kant’s Reform of Metaphysics: The Critique of Pure Reason Reconsidered makes her position clear: Kant is a reformist not a revolutionary and this refor...
  •  29
    Known unknowables
    Aeon. 2023.