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Radical Scepticism, Closure and Robust Knowledge | Epistemology@Edinburgh
https://edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com/2009/05/14/radical-scepticism-closure-and-robust-knowledge
Epistemological ruminations from the postgraduates at the University of Edinburgh. 14 May, 2009. Radical Scepticism, Closure and Robust Knowledge. Hi folks, I’m attaching here a rough draft of a paper I’ve written which touches upon some themes from Duncan’s “Radical Scepticism, Epistemic Luck and Epistemic Value.” Comments welcome! Below is a link to the paper–Cheers, Adam. Laquo; Value of Knowledge Book Update. CFP: 2010 Episteme Conference in Edinburgh. On 23 May, 2009. Bloggin’ the Question.
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Upcoming Events | Epistemology@Edinburgh
https://edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com/upcoming-events
Epistemological ruminations from the postgraduates at the University of Edinburgh. There’s a lot going to be happening here in Epistemology over the coming years. I lack specific details for most of these events, but I thought it worth flagging what’s planned anyway, even though there are a few gaps. Here are the main events planned:. We will be hosting the 2010. We’re planning a conference on ancient epistemology, probably for 2011. Bloggin’ the Question. International Society for the Study of Scepticism.
edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com
Two New Articles Posted | Epistemology@Edinburgh
https://edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com/2008/10/16/two-new-articles-posted
Epistemological ruminations from the postgraduates at the University of Edinburgh. Posted by: Duncan Pritchard. 16 October, 2008. Two New Articles Posted. This just to let you know that over at our Research Resources. Page we now have two new articles posted, by Matthew Chrisman (‘Knowledge as True Belief that One Ought to Have’ ) and Joe Kuntz (‘The Truth and the Right in Virtue Epistemology’). Matthew will be presenting this paper tonight at the PhilSoc. Laquo; Value of Knowledge Book.
edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com
Value of Knowledge Book | Epistemology@Edinburgh
https://edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com/2008/10/14/value-of-knowledge-book
Epistemological ruminations from the postgraduates at the University of Edinburgh. Posted by: Duncan Pritchard. 14 October, 2008. Value of Knowledge Book. I’ve just updated the draft chapters for the book on the value of knowledge that I’m writing with Alan Millar and Adrian Haddock, and which I recently posted on. Here are the new draft chapters:. Chapter One: The Value Problem for Knowledge ( pdf. Chapter Two: Knowledge and Final Value ( pdf. Chapter Three: Anti-Luck Virtue Epistemology ( pdf.
edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com
Truth, ability and epistemic luck | Epistemology@Edinburgh
https://edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com/2008/10/28/truth-ability-and-epistemic-luck
Epistemological ruminations from the postgraduates at the University of Edinburgh. 28 October, 2008. Truth, ability and epistemic luck. Dependence incompatibilism: The truth of a belief depends on ability iff it does not depend on luck. Alternatively, a virtue-theoretic account of knowledge might appeal to a different conception of this dependence relation: call it ‘dependence compatibilism.’. Laquo; Two New Articles Posted. New Society and Blog. On 31 October, 2008. I guess that’s the one:. I guess the ...
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Trent Dougherty
https://sites.google.com/site/trentdougherty
This is the Name of This Blog. I am Associate Professor of Philosophy at Baylor University. I did my PhD at the University of Rochester in New York with Richard Feldman, Earl Conee, Henry Kyburg, and Ed Wierenga. My primary work is in epistemology, especially the intersection of traditional epistemology with formal and virtue epistemology. Much of the epistemology I do is a branch of ethics, so I do ethics too. I even do animal ethics, currently working on a book on the theology of animal suffering.
boramlee.wordpress.com
Footnotes to Hume | Page 2
https://boramlee.wordpress.com/page/2
We all want personal safety for ourselves, and also the safety of the people we care about. So, many of us believe in a heaven, where we and our loved ones will be protected against all harm. But suppose that there is no heaven. Then it seems that absolute safety is not for us mere mortals. Mystics tend to believe otherwise. They believe that they can be absolutely safe come what may, Continue reading →. October 21, 2007. What’s Your Philosophical Temperament? A passage expressing what I do. Build a webs...
edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com
New Society and Blog | Epistemology@Edinburgh
https://edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com/2008/11/12/new-society-and-blog
Epistemological ruminations from the postgraduates at the University of Edinburgh. Posted by: Duncan Pritchard. 12 November, 2008. New Society and Blog. The International Society for the Study of Scepticism. Has just been founded, and this organisation also now has its own blog. Laquo; Truth, ability and epistemic luck. Bloggin’ the Question. International Society for the Study of Scepticism. Keith DeRose’s Epistemology Page. Keith Korcz’s Epistemology Research Guide. Long Words Bother Me.
edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com
Who’s Who | Epistemology@Edinburgh
https://edinburghepistemology.wordpress.com/whos-who
Epistemological ruminations from the postgraduates at the University of Edinburgh. Dr Chrisman joined the department in August 2006 after finishing his Ph.D. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In conjunction with his work in ethics, he is interested in the nature of epistemic normativity and the semantics of knowledge attributions. His publications in epistemology include ‘From Epistemic Contextualism to Epistemic Expressivism’ (. 2007) and ‘Ought to Believe’ (. Christos’ thesis co...