•  36
    Pluralism about trust
    Synthese 207 (3): 93. 2026.
    Trust is crucial for much of what we know and do. As Annette Baier (Moral Prejudices, 1994) remarks, trust is like air—something both essential and taken for granted in social living. Yet, consensus about how best to understand trust remains elusive. Amidst competing predictive, affective, and normative accounts of trust, some trust scholars accept pluralism, viz., the thesis that trust comes in different forms. Pluralism remains underdeveloped, however. In this paper, after motivating pluralism…Read more
  •  48
    The concept of truth is at the core of science, journalism, law, and many other pillars of modern society. Yet, given the imprecision of natural language, deciding what information should count as true is no easy task, even with access to the ground truth. How do people decide whether a given claim of fact qualifies as true or false? Across two studies (N = 1181; 16,248 observations), participants saw claims of fact alongside the ground truth about those claims. Participants classified each clai…Read more
  •  637
    Review of: John Pittard, Disagreement, Deference, and Religious Commitment (review)
    European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 12 (4): 228-234. 2020.
    Book Review.
  •  127
    Peircean Faith: Perception, Trust, and Religious Belief in the Conduct of Life
    Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 54 (4): 457. 2018.
    Classical pragmatists, especially William James, have long been known as defenders of the rationality of religious commitment. Recently, however, scholars have begun to appreciate Charles Sanders Peirce's unique contributions to that defense. For instance, Richard Atkins defends Peirce's Sentimental Conservatism as advising us to trust in our instinctual sentiments rather than our reasonings and theories, elucidating an account of the rationality of religious belief in Peirce's "A Neglected Argu…Read more