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500The Ethics of MetaphorEthics 128 (4): 728-755. 2018.Increasingly, metaphors are the target of political critique: Jewish groups condemn Holocaust imagery; mental health organizations, the metaphorical exploitation of psychosis; and feminists, “rape metaphors.” I develop a novel model for making sense of such critiques of metaphor.
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349Narrative testimonyPhilosophical Studies 178 (12): 4025-4052. 2021.Epistemologists of testimony have focused almost exclusively on the epistemic dynamics of simple testimony. We do sometimes testify by ways of simple, single sentence assertions. But much of our testimony is narratively structured. I argue that narrative testimony gives rise to a form of epistemic dependence that is far richer and more far reaching than the epistemic dependence characteristic of simple testimony.
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238Absolutely general knowledgePhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 103 (3): 547-566. 2020.Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Volume 103, Issue 3, Page 547-566, November 2021.
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193How to talk back: hate speech, misinformation, and the limits of saliencePolitics, Philosophy and Economics 22 (3): 315-335. 2023.Hate speech and misinformation are rife. How to respond? Counterspeech proposals say: with more and better speech. This paper considers the treatment of counterspeech in Maxime Lepoutre’s Democratic Speech In Divided Times. Lepoutre provides a nuanced defence of counterspeech. Some counterspeech, he grants, is flawed. But, he says: counterspeech can be debugged. Once we understand why counterspeech fails – when fail it does – we can engineer more effective counterspeech strategies. Lepoutre argu…Read more
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179IV—The Limits of Immanent CritiqueProceedings of the Aristotelian Society. forthcoming.The tradition of immanent critique promises a lot. It promises to be critical of the existing social order without appealing to ‘external’ normative standards. I argue that the prospects for immanent criticism are bleak: they must either commit to an implausible social ontology, a flawed meta-normative theory, or both.
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159Mushy Akrasia: Why Mushy Credences Are Rationally PermissiblePhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 105 (1): 79-106. 2021.Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, EarlyView.
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158Aesthetic InjusticeEthics 134 (4): 449-478. 2024.Our aesthetic judgments are embedded in and shaped by unjust social orders. But can our aesthetic judgments themselves—“this is beautiful; that is not”—be unjust? This article argues that they can. Admitting that this is so does not require us to be unduly revisionary with respect to our concept of justice. Rather, the thought that aesthetic judgments are unjust flows naturally from familiar egalitarian constraints.
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148KK Failures Are Not AbominableMind 131 (522): 575-584. 2022.Kevin Dorst has recently provided a novel argument for the KK principle. In this paper I sketch a rejoinder.
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142Risk, doubt, and transmissionPhilosophical Studies 173 (10): 2803-2821. 2016.Despite their substantial appeal, closure principles have fallen on hard times. Both anti-luck conditions on knowledge and the defeasibility of knowledge look to be in tension with natural ways of articulating single-premise closure principles. The project of this paper is to show that plausible theses in the epistemology of testimony face problems structurally identical to those faced by closure principles. First I show how Lasonen-Aarnio’s claim that there is a tension between single premise c…Read more
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133An Introduction to Feminism, by Lorna Finlayson (review)Mind 126 (504): 1251-1259. 2017.Philosophers are often rude about each other, but their rudeness tends to be off the record, anonymous or sneaked in under the bloodless academic lexicon of ‘the worry’, ‘the concern’ and ‘the potential limitation’. But Lorna Finlayson’s rudeness comes with no softening frills: against her tailored prose, her insults pop. They make for quite a treat: desert landscapes may be all very well, but there is no need for philosophical writing to share their wearying climate. Introductory texts — and th…Read more
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124Stakes sensitivity and transformative experienceAnalysis 78 (1): 34-39. 2018.I trace the relationship between the view that knowledge is stakes sensitive and Laurie Paul’s account of the epistemology of transformative experience. The view that knowledge is stakes sensitive comes in different flavours: one can go for subjective or objective conceptions of stakes, where subjective views of stakes take stakes to be a function of an agent’s non-factive mental states, and objective views of stakes do not. I argue that there is a tension between subjective accounts of stakes s…Read more
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93Testimonial PessimismIn Matthew A. Benton, John Hawthorne & Dani Rabinowitz (eds.), Knowledge, Belief, and God: New Insights in Religious Epistemology, Oxford University Press. pp. 203-227. 2018.
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45How to be trustworthy, by KatherineHawleyOxford: Oxford University Press, 2019, vii + 151 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐19‐884390‐0 (review)European Journal of Philosophy 28 (2): 533-536. 2020.