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1100Avner Baz's Ordinary Language Challenge to the Philosophical Method of CasesDialectica 76 (4): 571-596. 2022.Avner Baz argues that the philosophical method of cases presupposes a problematic view of language and linguistic competence, namely, what he calls “the atomistic-compositional view”. Combining key elements of social pragmatism and contextualism, Baz presents a view of language and linguistic competence, which he takes to be more sensitive to the open-endedness of human language. On this view, there are conditions for the “normal” and “felicitous” use of human words, conditions that Baz thinks a…Read more
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34The Vice of Nepotism: The Moral and the EpistemicSocial Epistemology. forthcoming.Nepotism forms a core part of our everyday moral and socio-political vocabulary, yet we lack a coherent account of it. The aim of this paper is to provide that account. I argue that nepotism (i.e. nepotism proper) is a moral vice, which has a hitherto unnoticed epistemic counterpart, namely, epistemic nepotism. Further, I argue that nepotism proper is a disposition to give undue weight to one’s primordial private realm or the interests of its members in the distribution of social goods within th…Read more
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421The Vice of Nepotism: The Moral and the EpistemicSocial Epistemology: A Journal of Knowledge, Culture, and Policy. forthcoming.Nepotism forms a core part of our everyday moral and socio-political vocabulary, yet we lack a coherent account of it. The aim of this paper is to provide that account. I argue that nepotism (i.e., nepotism proper) is a moral vice, which has a hitherto unnoticed epistemic counterpart, namely, epistemic nepotism. Further, I argue that nepotism proper is a disposition to give undue weight to one’s primordial private realm or the interests of its members in the distribution of social goods within t…Read more
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1Thought experiments play a prominent role in philosophical inquiry. And yet we lack a good understanding of how they work and how they are supposed to supply evidence or knowledge in inquiry. This dissertation offers a novel account of the epistemology of philosophical thought experiments, namely, the reason-responsiveness view. The view is inspired by a virtue ethical tradition that flowers in John McDowell (1994) and Miranda Fricker (2007). Drawing on this virtue ethical tradition, I argue tha…Read more
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878The Calibration Challenge to Philosophical IntuitionsSynthese 205 (94): 1-25. 2025.To several critics of the philosophical method of cases—Robert Cummins, Jonathan Weinberg and his colleagues, and Avner Baz—the fact that philosophical intuitions cannot be calibrated means that we cannot rule out the skeptical hypothesis that the outcome of our theorizing based on these intuitions is deeply distorted by our cognitive artifacts. Moreover, they take this hypothesis to license the negative conclusion that we are unable to have much of the armchair knowledge we typically attribute …Read more
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1298Ethnophilosophy as Decolonization: Revisiting the Question of African PhilosophyPhilosophical Papers 52 (2): 109-142. 2024.Ethnophilosophy is widely regarded as a disreputable orientation in African philosophy. For example, critics of ethnophilosophy think of it as a ‘defective philosophy’, a ‘semi-anthropological paraphrase’, a merely ‘implicit philosophy ’, a ‘crazed language’ and so on. Although these negative portrayals were made in the 1980s and 1990s (roughly, 1981–1997), and some of these critics softened their position with time, they persist in the thoughts of some contemporary African philosophers. This is…Read more
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657The Equal Status of Indigenous Knowledge and Scientific Knowledge in the Academic Curriculum: The Case from MētisAustralasian Philosophical Review. forthcoming.This paper focuses on Elizabeth Anderson’s application of the epistemological idiom of mētis in debates concerning the equal status of indigenous knowledge and scientific knowledge within the academic curriculum. Against critics who deny this equal status to indigenous knowledge or science, Anderson defends what one might term a conciliatory view, the view roughly that indigenous knowledge meets the criteria of scientific knowledge presupposed by these critics, and it is continuous with the agro…Read more
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1051Ethnocentric Universalism: Its Nature, Epistemic Harm, and Emancipatory ProspectsSocial Epistemology: A Journal of Knowledge, Culture and Policy. forthcoming.This paper does three interrelated things. First, it argues that the universalism that forms the target of criticism and attack by decolonial theorists from the Global South is a debased form of universalism, what might be termed “ethnocentric universalism.” Second, equipped with a conceptual grip on ethnocentric universalism, it shows that the picture on which ethnocentric universalism confers some innocuous epistemic privilege to members of dominant groups is not quite accurate—ethnocentric u…Read more
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7062African EpistemologyThe Blackwell Companion to Epistemology, Third Edition, Kurt Sylvan, Matthias Steup, Ernest Sosa and Jonathan Dancy (Eds.). forthcoming.This chapter examines the three projects that constitute contemporary African epistemology and suggests various ways in which they can be put on a firmer footing, and by so doing advance the epistemic goal of the discipline. These three projects include ethno-epistemology, analytic African epistemology and what one might call ameliorative African epistemology. Ethno-epistemology is the study of the phenomenon of knowledge from the perspective of particular African communities as revealed in the…Read more
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68Epistemology of Thought Experiments: The Reason-Responsiveness ViewDissertation, Cardiff University. 2023.This dissertation advances and defends two interrelated claims. First, the most significant contribution of Timothy Williamson (2007, 2022), Herman Cappelen (2012), and Max Deutsch (2015) to the debate on the epistemology of thought experiments lies not in their denial of intuition or their dismissal of experimental philosophy, but in their endorsement of the claim of epistemological continuity. Second, the best way to implement the claim of epistemological continuity is not through Deutsch and …Read more
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155The epistemology of thought experiments without exceptionalist ingredientsSynthese 200 (3): 1-29. 2022.This paper argues for two interrelated claims. The first is that the most innovative contribution of Timothy Williamson, Herman Cappelen, and Max Deutsch in the debate about the epistemology of thought experiments is not the denial of intuition and the claim of the irrelevance of experimental philosophy but the claim of epistemological continuity and the rejection of philosophical exceptionalism. The second is that a better way of implementing the claim of epistemological continuity is not Deuts…Read more
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100How to be a Universalist about Methods in African PhilosophySouthern Journal of Philosophy 60 (2): 154-172. 2021.The Southern Journal of Philosophy, Volume 60, Issue 2, Page 154-172, June 2022.
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94The prospects of the method of wide reflective equilibrium in contemporary African epistemologySouth African Journal of Philosophy 40 (1): 64-74. 2021.This article makes a case for wide reflective equilibrium in doing African epistemology. It argues that on the issue of formulating a viable theory of knowledge, such an approach is more promising than the extant dominant approaches, namely the method of ethno-epistemology and the method of particularistic studies. More specifically, wide reflective equilibrium articulates a proper balance between philosophy and culture and endows a theory of knowledge with multiple sources of normativity.
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149A fresh look at the expertise reply to the variation problemPhilosophical Psychology 33 (6): 840-867. 2020.Champions of the methodological movement of experimental philosophy have challenged the long-standing practice of relying on intuitive verdicts on cases in philosophical inquiry. They argue that th...
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102An Agent-Based Account of the Normativity of Reflective EquilibriumPhilosophia 48 (1): 217-225. 2020.According to an influential characterisation of reflective equilibrium, it is a kind of algorithm for licensing explicitly normative claims in philosophical inquiries. Call this the machine-view of reflective equilibrium. The machine-view implies a causal relation between input and output data that is devoid of human agency in any significant sense. In this paper, I argue for a neo-Aristotelian alternative view. According to this view, the judgement that is called forth in the decision procedure…Read more
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LMU MunichPost-doctoral Fellow
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Virtue Epistemology |
| Metaphilosophy |