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32 results

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1. Radical psychotic doubt and epistemology.

2. Knowledge and belief in Korean.

3. Intellectualism and the argument from cognitive science.

4. Lucky joint action.

5. An epistemic argument for liberalism about perceptual content.

6. Do we need visual subjects?

7. Knowledge and availability.

8. Two flaws concerning belief accounts of implicit biases.

9. Moral internalism, amoralist skepticism and the factivity effect.

10. Qualitative tools and experimental philosophy.

11. Intuitions, concepts, and imagination.

12. (A Laconic Exposition of) a method by which the internal compositional features of qualitative experience can be made evident to subjective awareness.

13. Two tales of functional explanation.

14. Moral error theories and folk metaethics.

15. Evidence that stakes don’t matter for evidence.

16. Tracking instability in our philosophical judgments: Is it intuitive?

17. How convenient! The epistemic rationale of self-validating belief systems.

18. What certainty teaches.

19. Generative memory.

20. Is experimental philosophy philosophically significant?

21. Philosophical methodology: The current debate.

22. Comments on William Bechtel's “Looking down, around, and up: Mechanistic explanation in psychology”.

23. What is Self-Control?

24. On Representing Objects with a Language of Sentience.

25. Do You See What We See? An Investigation of an Argument Against Collective Representation.

26. Evaluating Need for Cognition: A Case Study in Naturalistic Epistemic Virtue Theory.

27. An Argument Against Dispositionalist HOT Theory.

28. Does Simulation Theory Really Involve Simulation?*.

29. From Linguistic Contextualism to Situated Cognition: the Case of Ad Hoc Concepts.

30. Defending Realism on the Proper Ground.

31. Pluralism and Naturalism: Why the Proliferation of Theories is Good for the Mind.

32. Features, places, and things: reflections on Austen Clark's theory of sentience.