Extra readings for knowledge section of Society, Knowledge, and the Self
- Lecture 1. Rationalism - Weintraub, R. (2006): ‘What Descartes’ Demon Can Do and his Dream Cannot’. Theoria (72), pp. 319-335.
- Lecture 2. Empiricism and Humean Skepticism - Weintraub, R. (2013): A New Humean Criticism of Our Inductive Practice, The European Legacy, 18:4, 420-431.
- Lecture 3. Idealism (Berkeley) -
- Lecture 4. Realism and Anti-Realism - Brendel, E. (2014): Contexturalism, Relativism, and the Semantics of Knowledge Ascriptions, Philosophical Studies, 168, 101-117.
- Lecture 5. Observation - Siegel, S. (2013): The Epistemic Impact of the Etiology of Experience, Philosophical Studies, 162 (3): 697-722.
- Lecture 6. Naturalism - Levin, J. M. (2013). Armchair Methodology and Epistemological Naturalism. Synthese/Springer. Vol. 190 (18), pp. 4117-4136.
- Lecture 7. K JTB (plato + gettier) - Fine, G. (1990): “Knowledge and Belief in Republic 5-7” in S. Everson, ed., Cambridge Companions to Ancient Thought I: Epistemology, 85-115.
- Lecture 8. Epistemic Externalism - Srinivasan, A. (2017): Radical Externalism, Online here.
- Lecture 9. Epistemic Internalism - Srinivasan, A. (2017): Radical Externalism, Online here.
- Lecture 10. Williamson - Fricker, E., (2009): Is Knowing a State of Mind? The Case Against, in P. Greenough and D. Pritchard, Williamson on Knowledge, Oxford University Press.