The speakers and commentators are set for the 2026 Rutgers Epistemology Conference. Consider applying for the Young Epistemologist Prize if you are eligible!
https://t.co/PP6urFaA3R
Hey Philosophers, here is some information about the next Rutgers Epistemology conference, including information on the Young Epistemologist Prize: https://t.co/38NhkmgzLQ
@LaraBuchak Got it, cool experiment! But what if it turns out that as the years go by classes are split roughly 50/50 between cooperation and defection?
🥳 What a great year it’s been, with some terrific titles!
To celebrate, we have compiled our best ANZ Philosophy titles for 2022, including books by @Juan and #BertrandRussell
👉 If you buy now, you also get a 20% discount! https://t.co/VuzS4WuiVR
#BookTwitter
Tomorrow Timothy Kearl from Glasgow will be giving an extra Logos talk on the obstacles to knowledge, and how talk about preventers of knowledge allows us to account for epistemic excuses in a way that can be accommodated in extant paradigms of epistemic responsibility
This Wednesday, Juan Comesaña (@Juan) from Rutgers, will give a Logos colloquium on how the old argument from illusion in epistemology is compatible with the anti-luminosity argument and the distinction between justification and excuses that knowledge-first accounts usually wield