•  70
    Epistemic akrasia and higher-order beliefs
    Philosophical Studies 177 (9): 2501-2515. 2019.
    According to the Fragmentation Analysis, epistemic akrasia is a state of conflict between beliefs formed by the linguistic and non-linguistic belief-formation systems, and epistemic akrasia is irrational because it is a state of conflict between beliefs so formed. I argue that there are cases of higher-order epistemic akrasia, where both beliefs are formed by the linguistic belief-formation system. Because the Fragmentation Analysis cannot accommodate this possibility, the Fragmentation Analysis…Read more
  •  59
    Good Thinking
    Dissertation, University of Arizona. 2022.
    Good Thinking is a collection of papers about abilities, skills, and know-how and the distinctive but often overlooked—or explained away—role that these phenomena play in various foundational issues in epistemology and action theory. Each chapter, taken on its own, represents a fairly specific intervention into debates in (i) epistemic responsibility, (ii) the nature of inferential justification, and (iii) connections between inference and action. But taken collectively, these chapters constitut…Read more
  •  16
    Manuscript Title: A Plea for Exemptions
    Erkenntnis 1-18. forthcoming.
    Currently popular theories of epistemic responsibility rest on the assumption that justification and excuse exhaust the relevant normative categories. One gets the sense that, once we've laid down the conditions for justified belief, and once we've laid down the conditions of excusably unjustified belief, the work is done; all that's left is to clock out. Against this backdrop, one is naturally led to think that if an agent's doxastic state fails to be justified, it is thereby unjustified, perha…Read more
  •  3
    Evidentialism and the Problem of Basic Competence
    Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 9 (n/a). 2022.
    According to evidentialists about inferential justification, an agent’s evidence—and only her evidence—determines which inferences she would be justified in making, whether or not she in fact makes them. But there seem to be cases in which two agents would be justified in making different inferences from a shared body of evidence, merely in virtue of the different competences those agents possess. These sorts of cases suggest that evidence does not have the pride of place afforded to it by evide…Read more
  •  1
    A Plea for Exemptions
    Erkenntnis. forthcoming.
    Currently popular theories of epistemic responsibility rest on the (perhaps implicit) assumption that justification and excuse exhaust the relevant normative categories. One gets the sense that, once we’ve laid down the conditions for justified belief, and once we’ve laid down the conditions for excusably unjustified belief, the work is done; all that’s left is to clock out. This picture of epistemic responsibility is mistaken; some agents are epistemically incompetent, and in virtue of their in…Read more