University of Oxford
Faculty of Philosophy, Pembroke College
DPhil, 2023
CV
Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
Social Epistemology
Feminist Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Epistemic Injustice
  •  185
    Recently David Ludwig has argued that spending finite attentional resources on the question of how to achieve epistemic justice can contribute to sidelining the question of how to achieve material justice, even though achieving material justice is often what is most pressing. I respond to this ‘challenge of distorting agendas’ on behalf of work on at least some epistemic injustices of two widely-discussed sorts, namely hermeneutical injustices and contributory injustices. I show that key is to r…Read more
  •  1024
    Previously proposed strategies for preventing hermeneutical injustices mostly take for granted the interests people have in various things about themselves being intelligible, and aim only to enable them to satisfy these interests. Historically, the pursuit of such strategies has been somewhat successful in preventing trans people from suffering hermeneutical injustices in their interactions with cis people. Yet the widespread anti-trans backlash of recent years has brought to the fore a number …Read more
  •  152
    I draw on work in social epistemology, feminist philosophy, trans philosophy, queer theory, and ethics to rethink what hermeneutical injustices are, who suffers them, and what can be done to prevent them. I identify several problems with Miranda Fricker’s original account of what hermeneutical injustices are and how they arise, and argue for a number of revisions and clarifications in order to solve these problems. One upshot of these revisions is that more people suffer hermeneutical injustices…Read more
  •  1633
    Previously proposed strategies for tackling hermeneutical injustices take for granted the interests people have in certain things about them being intelligible to them and/or to others, and seek to enable them to satisfy these interests. Strategies of this sort I call interests-as-given strategies. I propose that some hermeneutical injustices can instead be tackled by doing away with certain of these interests, and so with the possibility of their unfair non-satisfaction. Strategies of this sort…Read more
  •  234
    Whose Hermeneutical Marginalization?
    Episteme 20 (3): 813-832. 2023.
    According to Miranda Fricker, being hindered from rendering something significant about oneself intelligible to someone constitutes a hermeneutical injustice only if it results from the hermeneutical marginalization of some group to which one belongs. A major problem for Fricker’s picture is that it cannot properly account for the paradigm case of hermeneutical injustice Fricker herself takes from Ian McEwan’s novel Enduring Love. In order to account properly for this case, I argue that being hi…Read more