University of Leeds
School of Philosophy, Religion, and History of Science
PhD, 2024
CV
Leeds, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  • This thesis is an investigation into the nature of epistemic justification. It brings together themes from traditional, individual-centred epistemology, and collective, group-centred epistemology. The first half of the thesis is concerned with the question of whether rationality is epistemically permissive; that is, whether one body of evidence can rationalise more than one doxastic attitude. In chapter 1, I argue that permissive cases are best understood as epistemic standard conflicts. Doing …Read more
  •  207
    Permissive Divergence
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 53 (3): 240-255. 2023.
    Within collective epistemology, there is a class of theories that understand the epistemic status of collective attitude ascriptions, such as ‘the college union knows that the industrial action is going to plan’, or ‘the jury justifiedly believes that the suspect is guilty’, as saying that a sufficient subset of group member attitudes have the relevant epistemic status. In this paper, I will demonstrate that these summativist approaches to collective epistemology are incompatible with epistemic …Read more
  •  277
    Review: The Epistemology of Groups by Jennifer Lackey (review)
    Perspectives: International Postgraduate Journal of Philosophy 9 (1): 380-387. 2021.
    When thinking about collective responsibility, we face a dilemma: on the one hand, we want to hold individuals, such as the responsible—or representative members accountable; on the other hand, we want to blame the entire corporation, as an independent entity over and above its composite parts. Such questions are taken up by Jennifer Lackey in her short but rich monograph. She points out that the two described ways of approaching collective responsibility are linked to the central divide between…Read more