goldmancv - rutgers university

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1 Alvin I. Goldman -- Curriculum Vitae (September 2014) Current Address(es) Department of Philosophy Rutgers University 106 Somerset Street New Brunswick, NJ 08901 Center for Cognitive Science Rutgers University 152 Frelinghuysen Road Piscataway, NJ [email protected] Education Columbia University, B.A., 1960, Summa cum laude Princeton University, M.A., 1962, Ph.D., 1965 Positions Held Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Board of Governors Professor, 2002- Department of Philosophy and Center for Cognitive Science University of Arizona, 1983-2002 Professor, 1983-1994, Regents’ Professor, 1994-2002 Department of Philosophy and Program in Cognitive Science University of Illinois at Chicago, Professor of Philosophy, 1980-83 University of Michigan, Assistant Professor, 1963-69; Associate Professor, 1969-73; Professor, 1973-80 Princeton University, Visiting Professor, Spring 2004 Yale University, Visiting Professor, Fall 1991 University of Pittsburgh, Visiting Associate Professor, Summer, 1972 Corpus Christi College, Oxford University, Temporary Member of Senior Common Room, 1967, 1988 Fellowships, Grants, Awards, and Honors Romanell Prize Lecturer on Philosophical Naturalism, American Philosophical Association (2010) Volume 79 of Grazer Philosophische Studien (2009) devoted to the philosophy of Alvin Goldman; reprinted as Reliable Knowledge and Social Epistemology, eds., G. Schurz and M. Werning, Rodopi (2009). Listed in Who’s Who in America. (2006) Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 2004). Resident, Bellagio Study and Conference Center, Bellagio, Italy, July 2003. Volume 29 of Philosophical Topics (2001) devoted to The Philosophy of Alvin Goldman. Co-winner (with William Talbott), Berger Prize in philosophy of law, American Philosophical Association, 2000-01. Romanell-Phi Beta Kappa Professorship, 2000-2001 (to deliver three public lectures at one’s home university, in this case, University of Arizona). NEH Fellowship for University Teachers (2000-2001), $24,000 ("Mind Understanding Mind"). Research Professorship, U of Arizona Social and Behavioral Sciences Research Institute, 2000.

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Alvin I. Goldman -- Curriculum Vitae (September 2014)

Current Address(es) Department of Philosophy Rutgers University 106 Somerset Street New Brunswick, NJ 08901 Center for Cognitive Science Rutgers University 152 Frelinghuysen Road Piscataway, NJ [email protected] Education Columbia University, B.A., 1960, Summa cum laude Princeton University, M.A., 1962, Ph.D., 1965 Positions Held Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Board of Governors Professor, 2002- Department of Philosophy and Center for Cognitive Science University of Arizona, 1983-2002

Professor, 1983-1994, Regents’ Professor, 1994-2002 Department of Philosophy and Program in Cognitive Science

University of Illinois at Chicago, Professor of Philosophy, 1980-83 University of Michigan, Assistant Professor, 1963-69; Associate Professor, 1969-73; Professor, 1973-80 Princeton University, Visiting Professor, Spring 2004 Yale University, Visiting Professor, Fall 1991 University of Pittsburgh, Visiting Associate Professor, Summer, 1972 Corpus Christi College, Oxford University, Temporary Member of Senior Common Room, 1967, 1988 Fellowships, Grants, Awards, and Honors Romanell Prize Lecturer on Philosophical Naturalism, American Philosophical Association (2010) Volume 79 of Grazer Philosophische Studien (2009) devoted to the philosophy of Alvin Goldman; reprinted as Reliable Knowledge and Social Epistemology, eds., G. Schurz and M. Werning, Rodopi (2009). Listed in Who’s Who in America. (2006) Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences (elected 2004). Resident, Bellagio Study and Conference Center, Bellagio, Italy, July 2003. Volume 29 of Philosophical Topics (2001) devoted to The Philosophy of Alvin Goldman. Co-winner (with William Talbott), Berger Prize in philosophy of law, American Philosophical Association, 2000-01. Romanell-Phi Beta Kappa Professorship, 2000-2001 (to deliver three public lectures at one’s home university, in this case, University of Arizona). NEH Fellowship for University Teachers (2000-2001), $24,000 ("Mind Understanding Mind"). Research Professorship, U of Arizona Social and Behavioral Sciences Research Institute, 2000.

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NEH Grant of $116,000 to direct a Summer Seminar for College and University Teachers, "Philosophical Foundations of Social Epistemology", 2000.

Fellow, Udall Center for Public Policy Studies (U of Arizona), 1996. Co-Investigator, Group Project on Rationality, National Endowment for the Humanities, $120,000 grant,

1993-96 Participating faculty member, NSF Project entitled "Cognitive Science: Language and Cognition,” 1993-95. Visiting Fellow, University of Pittsburgh Center for Philosophy of Science, Fall 1994. William Evans Visiting Fellowship, University of Otago, New Zealand, 1993. ACLS Travel Grant, Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, 1989. Research Professorship, U of Arizona Social and Behavioral Sciences Faculty, 1985. National Science Foundation Scholars Award, 1983. Fellow, National Humanities Center, 1981-82. Fellow, John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, 1975-76. Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, 1975-76. George Santayana Fellow, Harvard University, 1970-71. Sinclair Award for Counseling, University of Michigan, 1967. Danforth Fellow, 1960-63. Woodrow Wilson Fellow, 1960-61. Phi Beta Kappa (1960). Listed in Marquis' Who's Who in the West, 25th edition, 1996 Listed in Who’s Who in America. 2005. Included in The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, Ted Honderich, ed. (1995). Biography in the Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, 2nd edition, R. Audi, ed. (2000). Biography in Dictionary of Twentieth Century Philosophers, Routledge, forthcoming Biography in MacMillan Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2nd edition, forthcoming Extramural Activities and Positions President, American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, 1991-92 National Board of Officers, American Philosophical Association, 1990-93 President, Society for Philosophy and Psychology, 1987-88 Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Executive Committee, 1978-80 National Humanities Center, Final Selection Panel, 1986, 2002. National Endowment for the Humanities, Selection Panel, Washington, D.C., 1991. Committee on Lectures and Prizes, American Philosophical Association, 1976-78 Committee on the Status and Future of the Profession, APA, 1986, 1994-1997 Selection committee for the annual APA Romanell lecture on philosophical naturalism, 1997-2000

(member and sometime chair). Selection committee for the Romanell-Phi Beta Kappa Professorship. 2003-2006. r Editorial Activities Editor in Chief. Episteme: A Journal of Social Epistemology. Edinburgh University Press. 2005-2012; Cambridge University Press 2012- Member of Editorial Boards: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy; Nous; Philosophy and Phenomenological Research; Oxford Essays in Epistemology; Principia; Ethics and Information Technology; Philosophers’ Imprint (e-journal); Essays in Philosophy (e-journal); Mind and Society; Raritan: A Quarterly Review; Review of Philosophy and Psychology; Abstracta (online journal, with Portuguese/Brazilian editorship). Referee (partial list): Philosophical Studies; American Philosophical Quarterly; Synthese; Philosophical Review; Nous; Mind; Philosophical Quarterly; Philosophy of Science; British Journal for the Philosophy of Science; Journal for the Theory of Social Behavior; Ethics; Behavioral and Brain Sciences; Child Development; Trends in Cognitive Sciences; Law and Philosophy; MIT Press; Oxford University Press, Westview Press; National Endowment for the Humanities; National Science Foundation;

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Social Science

Research Council of Canada. Advisory Editor, Philosophical Gourmet Report; Studies in Cognitive Systems (Kluwer Publishers); Member, Board of Directors, Institute for Law and Philosophy (Rutgers University). Intramural Administration and Committee Work (A) Department (only major assignments are listed) Chairman, Department of Philosophy, University of Michigan, 1977-79. Director of Graduate Studies, University of Michigan Placement Officer, University of Michigan Graduate Admissions Chairman, University of Michigan Promotion Committee, University of Illinois at Chicago Director of Graduate Studies, University of Arizona Department Executive Committee, University of Arizona (many years) Recruitment Committee, Chair, University of Arizona (many years) Promotion and Tenure Committee (or Committee on Professional Status), Chair, University of Arizona,

1990-91, 1993-94 (B) College and University Senate Assembly, University of Michigan Humanities Board, University of Illinois at Chicago Faculty Senate, University of Illinois at Chicago Social and Behavioral Science Research Institute governing board, University of Arizona (many years) Social and Behavioral Sciences Promotion and Tenure Committee University of Arizona, 1988-89, Chair,

1989-90 Executive Committee, Cognitive Science Program, University of Arizona Steering Committee, Institutional Analysis Program, University of Arizona Budget Priorities Committee, Social and Behavioral Sciences, 1992, University of Arizona Conference Organization and Directorships Director, 2000 Summer Seminar on the Philosophical Foundations of Social Epistemology, NEH. Co-Director, 1986 Summer Institute on the Theory of Knowledge, funded by NEH. Local Arrangements Chairman, Meeting of the Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Tucson, 1989. Co-Organizer, Conference on Human Inference, University of Chicago, October, 1980; funded by the Sloan Foundation. Teaching Experience Theory of Knowledge, Knowledge and Cognition, Social Epistemology, Political Philosophy, Philosophy of Mind, Philosophical Naturalism, Philosophy and Psychology, Metaphysics, Philosophy of Social Science, Theory of Human Action, Contemporary Philosophy, Issues and Methods in Analytic Philosophy, , Philosophy of Language, American Philosophy, Introduction to Philosophy, Introduction to Logic, Great Books.

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Publications I. Chronological Organization of All Publications Books: 1. A Theory of Human Action, Prentice-Hall (1970), 230 pp.; reprinted in paperback by Princeton

University Press (1977). 2. Values and Morals, edited, with Jaegwon Kim, D. Reidel (1978), 331 pp. 3. Epistemology and Cognition, Harvard University Press (1986), 437 pp. Paperback edition (1988). 4. Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and Social Sciences (collected papers), MIT Press (1992),

336 pp. 5. Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science, edited, MIT Press (1993), 860 pp. Hardcover and

paperback. 6. Philosophical Applications of Cognitive Science, Westview Press (1993), 182 pp. Hardcover and

paperback. Italian translation (1996). Korean translation (1998).

7. Knowledge in a Social World, Oxford: Oxford University Press (1999). 407 pp. Hardcover and paperback. 8. Pathways to Knowledge: Private and Public (collected papers). New York: Oxford University Press (2002). 224 pp. Paperback edition (2004). 9. Simulating Minds: The Philosophy, Psychology and Neuroscience of Mindreading, New York: Oxford

University Press (2006), 364 pp. Paperback edition (2008).

10. G. Schurz and M. Werning, eds. Reliable Knowledge and Social Epistemology: Essays on the Philosophy of Alvin Goldman and Replies by Goldman. Amsterdam: Rodopi (2009).

11. Social Epistemology: Essential Readings, edited, with Dennis Whitcomb. New York: Oxford

University Press (2011). 12. Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology: Essays (collected papers). New York: Oxford University Press (2012). 13. Joint Ventures: Mindreading, Mirroring, and Embodied Cognition: (collected papers). Oxford University Press (2014). 14. Epistemology, A Contemporary Introduction (with Matthew McGrath). New York: Oxford University Press ( 2015).

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Articles: 1. "Ziff on the Inconsistency of English," Analysis 22: 106-108 (1962). 2. "A Causal Theory of Knowing," Journal of Philosophy 64: 357-372 (1967).

Reprinted in Roth and Galis, eds., Knowing, Random House (1970). Reprinted in Pappas and Swain, eds., Essays on Knowledge and Justification, Cornell University Press (1978). Reprinted in Davis, ed., Causal Theories, Walter de Gruyter (1983). Reprinted in Philosophical Problems, Open University text (England). German translation reprinted in Bieri, ed., Analytische Philosophie der Erkenntnis, Atheneum (1987). Reprinted on Goldman, Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and Social Sciences. MIT Press (1992). Reprinted in Goodman and Snyder, eds., Contemporary Readings in Epistemology, Prentice Hall (1993). Reprinted in Pojman, ed., The Theory of Knowledge, Wadsworth. 1st ed. (1992), 2nd ed. (1998).

Reprinted in Crumley, ed., Readings in Epistemology, Mayfield (1998). Reprinted in Kendall & Hunt, eds., Introducing Philosophy.

Reprinted in Bernecker and Dretske, eds., Knowledge: Readings in Contemporary Epistemology, Oxford University Press (2000). Reprinted in Jacquette, ed., Philosophical Entrees, McGraw-Hill. Reprinted in Huemer, ed., Epistemology: Contemporary Readings, Routledge (2002). Reprinted in Luper, ed., Epistemology, Longmans (2003). Croatian translation reprinted in Z. Culjak, ed., Belief, Justification and Knowledge, Ibis Grafika. Turkish translation reprinted in Hasan Yucel Basdemir, ed., A Companion to Epistemology.

3. "Actions, Predictions, and Books of Life," American Philosophical Quarterly 5: 135-151 (1968).

Reprinted in Feinberg, ed., Reason and Responsibility, Dickenson, 2nd through 6th editions. Reprinted in Alston and Brandt, eds., Problems of Philosophy, Allyn & Bacon, 2nd edition. Reprinted in Curd, ed., Argument and Analysis, West (1992).

4. "The Compatibility of Mechanism and Purpose," The Philosophical Review, 78: 468-482 (1969). 5. "The Individuation of Action," The Journal of Philosophy 68: 761-774 (1971). German translation in Lorenz, ed., Identitat und Individuation, Frommann-Holboog (1983). Reprinted in Casati and Varzi, eds., Events, Dartmouth Publishing Co. (1996). 6. "Toward a Theory of Social Power," Philosophical Studies 23: 221-268 (1972). Reprinted in Steven Lukes, ed., Power, NYU Press (1987). 7. "On the Measurement of Power," The Journal of Philosophy 71: 231-252 (1974). 8. "Power, Time, and Cost," Philosophical Studies 26: 263-270 (1974). 9. "Innate Knowledge," in Stephen P. Stich, ed., Innate Ideas, University of California Press, 1975.

Reprinted in Cahn, Kitcher and Sher, eds., Reason at Work, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. 10. "Discrimination and Perceptual Knowledge," The Journal of Philosophy 73: 771-791 (1976).

Reprinted in Pappas and Swain, ed., Essays on Knowledge and Justification, Cornell University Press (1978).

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Reprinted in Davis, ed., Causal Theories, Walter de Gruyter (1983). Reprinted in Moser and vander Nat, eds., Human Knowledge: Classical and Contemporary Approaches, Oxford University Press (1986). Reprinted in Dancy, ed., Perceptual Knowledge, Oxford University Press (1988). Reprinted in Pojman, ed., The Theory of Knowledge, Wadsworth. 1st edition (1992), 2nd edition (1998). Reprinted in Goldman, Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and Social Sciences. MIT Press (1992). Reprinted in Bernecker and Dretske, eds., Knowledge: Readings in Contemporary Epistemology, Oxford University Press (2000). Reprinted in Cahn, ed., Philosophy for the 21st Century, Oxford University Press (forthcoming). Spanish translation, reprinted in M. Ezcurdia and O. Hansberg, eds., La Naturaleza de la Experiencia, vol. 2, Percepcion. Instituto de Investigaciones de Filosophicas, UNAM (forthcoming). Reprinted in Adler and Elgin, eds., The Socratic Quest: An Introduction to Philosophy. Hackett Publishers (forthcoming).

11. "Reply to Braybrooke," Philosophical Studies, pp. 273-275 (1976). 12. "The Volitional Theory Revisited," in Myles Brand and Douglas Walton, eds., Action Theory, Reidel, pp. 67-84 (1976). 13. "Perceptual Objects," Synthese 35: 257-284 (1977).

Reprinted in Davis, ed., Causal Theories, Walter de Gruyter (1983). 14. "Chisholm's Theory of Action," Philosophia 7: 583-596 (1978). 15. "Epistemics: The Regulative Theory of Cognition," The Journal of Philosophy 75: 509-523 (1978). Reprinted in Kornblith, ed., Naturalizing Epistemology, MIT Press (1985).

Reprinted in Moser and vander Nat, eds., Human Knowledge: Classical and Contemporary Approaches, Oxford University Press (1986).

German translation reprinted in Bieri, ed., Analytische Philosophie der Erkenntnis, Atheneum (1987).

Reprinted in Garfield, ed., Foundations of Cognitive Science: The Essential Readings, Paragon (1990).

16. "Epistemology and the Psychology of Belief," The Monist 61: 523-535 (1978). 17. "Varieties of Cognitive Appraisal," Nous 13: 23-38 (1979). 18. "Action, Causation, and Unity," Nous 13: 261-270 (1979). 19. "What is Justified Belief?" in George Pappas, ed., Justification and Knowledge, D. Reidel, pp. 1-23 (1979).

Reprinted in Kornblith, ed., Naturalizing Epistemology, MIT Press (1985). Reprinted in Moser, ed., Empirical Knowledge, Rowman and Allanheld (1986).

Reprinted in Goodman and Snyder, eds., Contemporary Readings in Epistemology, Prentice Hall (1993). Reprinted in Pojman, ed., The Theory of Knowledge, Wadsworth Publishing Co. (1992). Reprinted in Goldman, Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and Social Sciences. MIT Press (1992). Reprinted in Lucey, ed., On Knowing and the Known: Introductory Readings in Epistemology, Prometheus (1996).

Reprinted in Alcoff, ed., Epistemology: The Big Questions, Blackwell (1998). Reprinted in Crumley, ed., Readings in Epistemology Mayfield (1998).

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Reprinted in Sosa and Kim, eds. Epistemology: An Anthology, Blackwell (2000). Reprinted in Luper, ed., Epistemology, Longmans (2003). Reprinted in Cahn, Eckert, and Buckley, eds. Knowledge and Reality: Classic and Contemporary Readings. Prentice-Hall (2004). Translated into French and reprinted in Dutant and Engel, eds., Philosophie de la Connaissance, J. Vrin (2005).

Reprinted in A. Pautz and M. Tye, ed., Perception, MIT Press (forthcoming) Reprinted in E. Sosa, et al., eds., Epistemology: An Anthology, 2nd ed., Blackwell (2008). Reprinted in D. Pritchard and R. Neta, eds. Arguing about Knowledge. Routledge (forthcoming). Reprinted in R. Neta, ed., Epistemology: Critical Concepts in Philosophy. Routledge (forthcoming). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology. Oxford UP (2012). 20. "The Internalist Conception of Justification," in Midwest Studies in Philosophy, Vol. 5, Studies in Epistemology, University of Minnesota Press, pp. 27-53 (1980). Reprinted in Kornblith, ed., Epistemology: Internalism and Externalism, Blackwell (2001).

Translated in Spanish and reprinted in Angeles Erana and Carlos Hernandez-Mercado, eds. Teorias Contemporaneas de la Justificacion Epistemica (vol. 1), Autonomous University of Mexico (forthcoming).

21. "Comments on Castaneda, 'Purpose, Action, and Wants'," Manuscrito 4: 53-61 (1981).

22. "Epistemology and the Theory of Problem Solving," Synthese 55: 21-48 (1983). 23. "The Relation between Epistemology and Psychology," Synthese 64: 29-68 (1985).

Reprinted in Cole et al, eds., Philosophy, Mind, and Cognitive Inquiry, Kluwer (1990). 24. "Constraints on Representation," in Myles Brand and Robert M. Harnish, eds., The Representation of

Knowledge and Belief, University of Arizona Press, pp. 287-313 (1986). 25. "Epistemology and the New Connectionism," in Newton Garver and Peter Hare, eds., Naturalism and

Rationality, Prometheus Books (1986). 26. Abstract: "Comment on Plantinga's 'Epistemic Justification'," Nous 20: 19 (1986). 27. "Foundations of Social Epistemics," Synthese 73: 109-144 (1987). 28. "Cognitive Science and Metaphysics," The Journal of Philosophy 84: 537-544 (1987). 29. "The Cognitive and Social Sides of Epistemology," in Arthur Fine and Peter Machamer, eds., PSA

1986, vol. 2, Philosophy of Science Association, pp. 295-311 (1987). 30. "Ambiguities in 'the Algorithmic Level'," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10: 84-85 (1987). 31. "On Epistemology and Cognition, a response to the review by S.W. Smoliar," Artificial Intelligence 34:

265-267 (1988). 32. "Strong and Weak Justification," in James Tomberlin, ed., Philosophical Perspectives, vol. 2,

Ridgeview Publishing Company, pp. 51-69 (1988). Reprinted in Moser and Vander Nat, eds., Human Knowledge: Classical and Contemporary Sources, 2nd ed. (1994). Reprinted in Crumley, ed., Readings in Epistemology Mayfield (1998).

33. "Derived Intentionality," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11: 514 (1988).

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34. "Action and Free Will," in Daniel Osherson et al, eds. An Invitation to Cognitive Science, MIT Press, pp. 317-340 (1990).

35. "BonJour's The Structure of Empirical Knowledge," in John Bender, ed., The Current State of the

Coherence Theory, Kluwer Publishing Company, pp. 105-115 (1989). 36. "Precis and Update of Epistemology and Cognition," in Marjorie Clay and Keith Lehrer, eds., Knowledge and Skepticism, pp. 69-87 (1989). 37. "Psychology and Philosophical Analysis," Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 89: 195-209 (1989).

Reprinted in M. Williams, ed., Scepticism, Dartmouth Publishing Co. (1993). 38. "Metaphysics, Mind, and Mental Science," Philosophical Topics 17: 131-145 (1989). 39. "Replies to the Commentators," Philosophia 19: 301-323 (1989). (Special issue devoted to

Epistemology and Cognition.) 40. "Interpretation Psychologized," Mind & Language 4: 161-185 (1989). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and Social Sciences. MIT Press (1992).

Reprinted in M. Davies and T. Stone, eds., Folk Psychology: The Theory of Mind Debate, Blackwell Publishers (1995). Reprinted in J. L. Bermudez, ed., Philosophy of Psychology: Contemporary Readings, Routledge (2006).

41. "Epistemic Paternalism: Communication Control in Law and Society," Journal of Philosophy 88: 113-

131 (1991). Reprinted in Goodman and Snyder, eds., Contemporary Readings in Epistemology,

Prentice-Hall (1993). Reprinted in L. Alexander, ed., Freedom of Speech, vol. 1, International Library of Law and Legal Theory (2nd series), Ashgate Publishers.

42. "Social Epistemics and Social Psychology," Social Epistemology 5: 121-125 (1991). 43. "An Economic Model of Scientific Activity and Truth Acquisition" (with Moshe Shaked), Philosophical Studies 63: 31-55 (1991). 44. "Results on Inquiry and Truth Possession" (with Moshe Shaked), Statistics and Probability Letters 12: 415-420 (1991). 45. "Cognition and Modal Metaphysics," in Goldman, Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and

Social Sciences, MIT Press, pp. 49-66 (1992). 46. "Epistemic Folkways and Scientific Epistemology," in Goldman, Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and Social Sciences, MIT Press, pp. 155-175 (1992). Reprinted in Kornblith, ed., Naturalizing Epistemology, 2nd ed., MIT Press (1993). Reprinted in Goldman, ed., Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science, MIT Press

(1993). Reprinted in Villanueva, ed., Knowledge and Science, Ridgeview Publishing Co. (1993). Reprinted in Moser and Vander Nat, eds., Human Knowledge: Classical and Contemporary Sources, Oxford U.P. (1994).

Reprinted in Moser, ed., Empirical Knowledge, 2nd ed.,Rowman & Littlefield (1997). Reprinted in Axtell, ed., Knowledge, Virtue and Character, Rowman & Littlefield (2000). Reprinted in Sosa and Kim, eds., Epistemology: An Anthology, Blackwell (2000). .

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47. "Epistemics and the Sciences of Knowledge", in Keith Lehrer and Ernest Sosa, eds., The Opened Curtain, Westview (1992).

48. "Action" (with Holly Smith), in Lawrence Becker, ed., Encyclopedia of Ethics, Garland Press, pp. 12-14 (1992). 49. "Reliabilism", in Jonathan Dancy and Ernest Sosa, eds., A Companion to Epistemology, Blackwell

Publishers, pp. 433-436 (1992). 50. "In Defense of the Simulation Theory," Mind & Language 7:104-119 (1992).

Reprinted in Davies and Stone, eds., Folk Psychology: The Theory of Mind Debate, Blackwell Publishers (1995).

51. "Ethics and Cognitive Science," Ethics 103: 337-360 (1993). Reprinted in Goldman, ed., Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science, MIT Press

(1993). Chinese translation forthcoming.

52. "Empathy, Mind, and Morals," in Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 66: 17-41 (1992).

Reprinted in Davies and Stone, eds., Mental Simulation: Philosophical and Psychological Essays, Blackwell Publishers (1995).

53. "The Psychology of Folk Psychology," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16: 15-28 (1993).

Reprinted in Goldman, ed., Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science, MIT Press (1993).

54. "Functionalism, the Theory-Theory, and Phenomenology," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16: 101-

108 (1993). 55. "Competing Accounts of Belief-Task Performance," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16: 43-44 (1993). 56. "Replication in Econometrics and Truth-Oriented Social Epistemology" (with Moshe Shaked), Social

Epistemology 7 (1993). 57. "Learning Stages and Person Conceptions," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16: 520 (1993). 58. "Consciousness, Folk Psychology, and Cognitive Science," Consciousness and Cognition 2: 364-382

(1993). Reprinted in Block, Flanagan, and Guzeldere, eds., The Nature of Consciousness, MIT Press (1997). Reprinting projected in Gao and Chu, eds., The Selected Works of Western Philosophers of Mind, Shangwu Publishing House, China.

59. "Argumentation and Social Epistemology," Journal of Philosophy 91: 27-49 (1994).

Italian translation in G. Piazza, ed., Experienza e Conoscenza; Introduzione all'epistemologia sociale, Milan: lcs (1996).

60. "Action," in Samuel Guttenplan, ed., A Companion to the Philosophy of Mind, Blackwell Publishers,

pp. 117-121 (1994). 61. "Accuracy in Journalism: An Economic Approach" (with James Cox), in Frederick Schmitt, ed.,

Socializing Epistemology, Rowman and Littlefield, pp. 189-215 (1994). 62. "Naturalistic Epistemology and Reliabilism," in Midwest Studies in Philosophy, vol. 19, University of Notre Dame Press, pp. 301-320 (1994).

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63. "Action and Crime: A Fine-Grained Approach," University of Pennsylvania Law Review 142: 1563-

1586 (1994). 64. "Knowledge," in Ted Honderich, ed., The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, Oxford University Press,

pp. 447-448 (1995). 65. "Justification, epistemic," (with Jack Bender) in Ted Honderich, ed., The Oxford Companion to Philosophy, Oxford University Press, p. 434 (1995). 66. "Reliabilism", in Robert Audi, ed., Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge University Press,

p. 693 (1995). 67. "Naturalistic Epistemology", in Robert Audi, ed., Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge

University Press, pp. 518-519 (1995). 68. "Social Epistemology," in Robert Audi, ed., Cambridge Dictionary of Philosophy, Cambridge University Press, p. 746 (1995). 69. "Simulation and Interpersonal Utility," Ethics 105: 709-726 (1995).

Reprinted in May, Friedman, and Clark, eds., Mind and Morals, MIT Press (1995). 70. "Argumentation and Interpersonal Justification," in F. van Eemeren, R. Grootendorst, J.A. Blair, and

C.A. Willard, eds., Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Argumentation (SicSat 5), Foris (1995).

Reprinted in Argumentation 11: 155-164 (1997). Italian translation in Fenomenologia E Societa 21: 46-57 (1998).

71. "Epistemology, Functionalism, and Privileged Access," Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18: 395-398 (1995). 72. "Psychological, Social, and Epistemic Factors in the Theory of Science," Mickey Forbes, ed., PSA

1994, vol. II, pp. 277-286, Philosophy of Science Association (1995). 73. "Social Epistemology, Interests, and Truth," Philosophical Topics 23: 171-187 (1995).

Italian translation in G. Piazza, ed., Esperienza e Conoscenza: Introduzione all'epistemologia sociale. Milan: lcs (1996).

74. "Education and Social Epistemology," Proceedings of the Philosophy of Education Society, pp. 68-79

(1996). Reprinted in Amelie Rorty, ed., Philosophy and Education, Routledge (1998). Portuguese translation reprinted in Contrapontos 3 (July/December), 2001.

75. "Speech, Truth, and the Free Market for Ideas" (with James Cox), Legal Theory 2: 1-32 (1996). 76. "Science, Publicity, and Consciousness," Philosophy of Science 64: 525-545 (1997).

Reprinted in B. Gertler and L. Shapiro, eds., Arguing about the Mind, Routledge (2011)) 77. "Games Lawyers Play: Legal Discovery and Social Epistemology" (with William Talbott), Legal Theory 4: 93-163 (1998). Winner of the Fred Berger Prize of the American Philosophical Association (2001). 78. "Reliabilism," in Edward Craig, ed., The Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Routledge (1998). 79. "Philosophical Theory and Intuitional Evidence" (with Joel Pust), in M. DePaul and W. Ramsey, eds.,

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Rethinking Intuition: The Psychology of Intuition and Its Role in Philosophical Inquiry, pp. 179-197, Rowman & Littlefield (1998).

80. "Epistemology and Cognition" and "Justification," in Frank Keil and Robert Wilson, eds., MIT

Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences, MIT Press (1999). 81. "Mirror Neurons and the Simulation Theory of Mind-Reading" (with Vittorio Gallese), Trends in

Cognitive Sciences 2, 12: 493-501 (1998). 82. "Why Citizens Should Vote: A Causal Responsibility Approach," Social Philosophy & Policy 16, 2: 201-217 (1999). Reprinted in D. Estlund, ed., Democracy, Blackwell Publishers (2002). 83. "Internalism Exposed," Journal of Philosophy 96, 6: 271-293 (June, 1999).

Reprinted in M. Steup, ed., Knowledge, Truth and Duty, Oxford University Press (2001). Reprinted in H. Kornblith, ed., Epistemology: Internalism and Externalism, Blackwell (2001). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Pathways to Knowledge, Private and Public. New York: Oxford University Press (2002). Reprinted in S. Luper, ed., Epistemology, Longmans (2003). Reprinted in E. Sosa et al, eds., Epistemology: An Anthology, 2nd ed., Blackwell (2008). Reprinted in R. Neta, ed., Epistemology: Critical Concepts in Philosophy, Routledge (2013).

84. "A Priori Warrant and Naturalistic Epistemology," in James Tomberlin (ed.), Philosophical

Perspectives, vol. 13, pp. 1-28 (1999). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Pathways to Knowledge, Private and Public. New York: Oxford

University Press (2001). 85. "Social Epistemology," Critica (Revista Hispanoamericana de Filosofia) 31: 3-19 (December, 1999). 86. "Simulation Theory and Mental Concepts," in J. Dokic and J. Proust, eds., Simulation and Knowledge of Action, Paris: Bibliotheque du CREA, pp. 35-71 (2000). 87. "Veritistic Social Epistemology," in Richard Cobb-Stevens, ed., Proceedings of the Twentieth World

Congress of Philosophy, vol. 5, pp. 107-114 (1999). 88. "Telerobotic Knowledge: A Reliabilist Approach," in Ken Goldberg, ed., The Robot in the Garden, MIT

Press (2000). 89. "Can Science Know When You're Conscious? Epistemological Foundations of Consciousness

Research," Journal of Consciousness Studies 7, 5: 3-22 (2000). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Pathways to Knowledge, Private and Public. New York: Oxford

University Press (2002). 90. "The Mentalizing Folk," in Dan Sperber, ed.,Metarepresentations, Vancouver Studies in Cognitive Science, Oxford University Press, pp. 171-196 (2000). 91. "Reply to Schulkin," (with Vittorio Gallese), Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4, 7: 255-256 (2000). 92. "Is Less Knowledge Better than More?" Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23, 5: 751-752 (2000). 93. "Folk Psychology and Mental Concepts," in Protosociology: An International Journal of

Interdisciplinary Research (G. Preyer, ed.,), vol. 14, pp. 4-25 (2000). 94. "Replies to Reviews of Knowledge in a Social World," Social Epistemology 14: 317-333 (2000).

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(Entire journal issue devoted to Knowledge in a Social World.) 95. “Social Epistemology”, in Edward Zalta, ed., Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (online),

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/epistemology-social/ (2001, revised, 2006). 96. "Epistemology," in Kang Ouyang, ed., British and American Philosophy and Philosophers. Chinese

volume published in China (2005). 97. "Desire, Intention, and the Simulation Theory," in B. Malle, L. Moses, and D. Baldwin, eds., Intentions

and Intentionality: Foundations of Social Cognition, MIT Press, pp. 207-224 (2001). 98. "The Unity of the Epistemic Virtues," in A. Fairweather and L. Zagzebski, eds., Virtue and Duty in

Epistemology, Oxford University Press, pp. 30-48 (2001). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Pathways to Knowledge, Private and Public. New York: Oxford University Press (2002). 99. "Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?" Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 63: 85-109

(2001). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Pathways to Knowledge, Private and Public. New York: Oxford University Press (2002).

Reprinted in The Philosophy of Expertise, E. Selinger and R. Crease, eds., Columbia University Press (2006). Reprinted in Chinese translation of The Philosophy of Expertise, Science Press (forthcoming). Chinese translation reprinted in Philosophical Analysis (Chinese journal), vol. 1, no. 4, Dec. 25, 2010, pp. 1-19. Reprinted in Social Epistemology: Essential Readings, Goldman and Whitcomb (eds.), New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.

100. “Social Routes to Belief and Knowledge,” The Monist 84: 346-368 (2001). 101. “What Is Social Epistemology? A Smorgasbord of Projects”, in Pathways to Knowledge: Private

and Public, Oxford University Press (2002). Abridged and translated into French in J. Proust and E. Pacherie, eds., Philosophie Cognitive (2005).

102. "Quasi-Objective Bayesianism and Legal Evidence”, Jurimetrics: The Journal of Law, Science, and

Technology 42: 237-260 (2002). 103. “Precis of Knowledge in a Social World and Reply to Commentators,” Philosophy and

Phenomenological Research 64: 185-190, 215-227 (2002). 104. “The Sciences and Epistemology,” in P. Moser, ed., The Oxford Handbook of Epistemology (pp.

144-176). Oxford University Press (2002). 105. “Replies to Contributors,” Philosophical Topics 29: 461-511 (2001). (Volume 29 devoted to the

Philosophy of Alvin Goldman). 106. “Conceptual Clarification and Empirical Defense of the Simulation Theory of Mindreading,” in C.

Kanzian, J. Quitterer, and E. Runggaldier, eds., Persons: An Interdisciplinary Approach. Wien: Obvahaupt (2003).

107. “Simple Heuristics and Legal Evidence,” Law, Probability, and Risk 2: 215-226 (2003). 108. “An Epistemological Approach to Argumentation,” Informal Logic 23 (1): 49-61 (2003). 109. “The Need for Social Epistemology,” in B. Leiter, ed., The Future of Philosophy (pp. 182-207).

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Oxford: Oxford University Press (2004). 110. “Sosa on Reflective Knowledge and Virtue Perspectivism,” in J. Greco, ed., Ernest Sosa and His

Critics. Blackwell Publishers (2004). 111. “Group Knowledge vs. Group Rationality: Two Approaches to Social Epistemology,” Episteme: A

Journal of Social Epistemology 1: 11-22 (2004). 112. “Epistemology and the Evidential Status of Introspective Reports,” Journal of Consciousness

Studies 11 (7-8): 1-16 (2004). 113. “Legal Evidence,” in M. Golding and W. Edmundson, eds., The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of

Law and Legal Theory (pp. 163-175). Blackwell Publishing (2005). 114. “Imitation, Mind Reading, and Simulation,” in S. Hurley and N. Chater, eds., Perspectives on

Imitation: From Neuroscience to Social Science, vol. 2 (pp. 79-93). MIT Press (2005). 115. “Simulationist Models of Face-Based Emotion Recognition” (with Chandra Sripada), Cognition

94:193-213 (2005). 116. “Disagreement in Philosophy,” in H. Battaly and M. Lynch, eds., Perspectives on the Philosophy of

William P. Alston (pp. 121-135). Rowman & Littlefield (2005).

117. “Mirror Systems, Social Understanding, and Social Cognition” (plus 10-12 responses to commentaries). In What Do Mirror Neurons Mean? Theoretical Implications of the Discovery of Mirror Neurons, G. Origgi and D, Sperber, moderators, a virtual workshop sponsored by the European Science Foundation. http://www.interdisciplines.org/mirror (2005).

118. “Simulation, mirroring, and a different argument from error” (letter) (with Natalie Sebanz). Trends in

Cognitive Sciences 9: 320 (2005). . 119. “Simulation and the Evolution of Mindreading” (with Chandra Sripada), in Antonio Zilhao, ed.,

Evolution, Rationality and Cognition: A Cognitive Science for the Twenty-First Century. Routledge (2005).

120. “The Simulation Theory,” in D. Borchert, ed., Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 2nd edition, Detroit:

Macmillan Reference USA (2006). 121. “Simulation” (with Kelby Mason), in Handbook of the Philosophy of Science, vol. 12, Philosophy of

Psychology, ed. Paul Thagard. Elsevier (2006). 122. “Social Epistemology” (revised and expanded version), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

(Fall 2006 edition), Edward Zalta, ed., URL = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2006/entries/epistemology-social/

123. “Imagination and Simulation in Audience Responses to Fiction,” in Shaun Nichols, ed., The

Architecture of the Imagination (pp. 41-56). Oxford: Oxford University Press (2006). 124. “Social Epistemology, Theory of Evidence, and Intelligent Design: Deciding What to Teach,” The

Southern Journal of Philosophy, Supplement, 44: 1-22 (2006). 125. “Philosophical Intuitions: Their Target, Their Source, and Their Epistemic Status”. Grazer

Philosophische Studien 74: 1-26 (2007). Also printed in Christian Beyer and Alex Burri, eds., Philosophical Knowledge, Its Possibility and Scope. Amsterdam: Rodopi (2007).

126. “A Program for ‘Naturalizing’ Metaphysics, with Application to the Ontology of Events,” The Monist

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90: 457-479 (2007). 127. “Does One Size Fit All? Hurley on Shared Circuits.” Behavioral and Brain Sciences (commentary)

(2007). 128. “The Social Epistemology of Blogging,” in Jeroen van den Hoven and John Weckert, eds.,

Information Technology and Moral Philosophy (pp. 111-122), Cambridge University Press (2008). 129. “Five Questions Answered,” in D. Pritchard and V. Hendricks, eds., Epistemology: 5 Questions.

New York: Automatic Press (2008). 130. “Hurley on Simulation,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 77(3): 775-788 (2008). 131. “Mirroring, Mindreading, and Simulation,” in J. A. Pineda, ed., Mirror Neuron Systems: The Role of

Mirroring Processes in Social Cognition, pp. 311-330. New York: Humana Press (2008).

132. “Immediate Justification and Process Reliabilism,” in Quentin Smith, ed., Epistemology: New Essays, pp. 63-82. New York: Oxford University Press (2008).

Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology. Oxford University Press. (2012) 133. “Williamson on Knowledge and Evidence,” in D. Pritchard and P. Greenough, eds., Williamson on

Knowledge, pp. 73-91. Oxford University Press (2009). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology. Oxford University Press. 134. “Reliabilism and the Value of Knowledge” (with Erik J. Olsson), in A. Haddock, A. Millar, and D.

Pritchard, eds., Epistemic Value, pp. 19-41. Oxford University Press (2009). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology. Oxford University Press. 135. “Reliabilism,” The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2008 Edition), Edward N.

Zalta (ed.), URL = <http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2008/entries/reliabilism/>.

Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology. Oxford University Press.

136. “Human Rationality: Epistemological and Psychological Perspectives,” in A. Beckermann, H.

Tetens, and S. Walter (eds). Philosophy: Foundations and Applications. Main Lectures and Colloquia Talks of GAP.6 (6th International Congress of the German Society for Analytic Philosophy), pp. 259-276. Paderborn: Mentis (2008).

137. “Social Epistemology: Theory and Applications,” in Anthony O’Hear, ed., Epistemology, Royal

Institute of Philosophy Supplement, 64:1-18 (2009). 138. “Mirroring, Simulating and Mindreading,” Mind & Language 24(2): 235-252 (2009). 140. “Is Social Cognition Embodied?” Trends in Cognitive Sciences 13(4): 154-159 (2009). (With

Frederique de Vignemont)

141. “Simulation Theory and Cognitive Neuroscience,” in Dominic Murphy and Michael Bishop, eds. Stich and His Critics, pp. 137-151. Blackwell Publishers (2009).

142. “Internalism, Externalism, and the Architecture of Justification,” Journal of Philosophy 106(6):

309-338 (2009). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology. Oxford

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University Press. 143. Book symposium on Simulating Minds: “Precis of Simulating Minds” and “Replies to the

Commentators, Perner & Brandl, Saxe, Vignemont, and Carruthers,” Philosophical Studies 144(3): 431-434, 477-491 (2009).

144. “Epistemic Relativism and Reasonable Disagreement,” in Richard Feldman and Ted Warfield, eds., Disagreement, pp. 187-215. New York: Oxford University Press (2010).

Reprinted in Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology. (2012).. Reprinted (in Spanish translation) in Cristian Santibanez Yanez and Gustavo Arroyo, eds., Problemas del Desacuerdo. Buenos Aires: Universidad Nacional de Sarmiento (2013, forthcoming). 145. “Systems-Oriented Social Epistemology,” in T. Gendler and J. Hawthorne, eds., Oxford Studies in

Epistemology, vol. 3, pp. 189-214. Oxford University Press (2010). Reprinted under the title "A Guide to Social Epistemology," in Social Epistemology: Essential

Readings, Goldman and Whitcomb, eds., New York: Oxford University Press (2011). Reprinted under the title "A Guide to Social Epistemology," in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and

Contemporary Epistemology (2012). 146. “Epistemology of Consciousness,” in T. Bayne, A. Cleeremans, and P. Wilken, eds. The Oxford

Companion to Consciousness, pp. 273-276. Oxford University Press (2009). 147. “Replies to Discussants,” in Grazer Philosophische Studien, 79: 245-288 (2009). (Part of a

symposium on the Philosophy of Alvin Goldman).

Reprinted in G. Schurz and M. Werning, eds., Reliabilism and Social Epistemology: Essays on the Philosophy of Alvin Goldman and Replies by Goldman, Rodopi (2009).

148. “Simulation Theory,” Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science 1(4): 527-538 (with Karen

Shanton) (2010). 148. “Why Social Epistemology Is Real Epistemology,” in A. Haddock, A. Millar, and D. Pritchard, eds., Social Epistemology. Oxford University Press (2010). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology (2012). 149. “Philosophical Naturalism and Intuitional Methodology” (Romanell Lecture), Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association, pp. 115-150 (2010). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology (2012).

Reprinted in Casullo and Thurow, eds, The A Priori in Philosophy. Oxford University Press (2013).

150. “Two Routes to Empathy: Insights from Cognitive Neuroscience,” in A. Coplan and P. Goldie

(eds.), Empathy: Philosophical and Psychological Perspectives, pp. 31-44. Oxford University Press (2011).

151. “Toward a Synthesis of Reliabilism and Evidentialism? Or: Evidentialism’s Problems, Reliabilism’s Rescue Package,” in T. Dougherty (ed.), Evidentialism and Its Discontents, pp. 254-280. Oxford University Press (2011). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Reliabilism and Contemporary Epistemology (2012). 152. “Theory of Mind,” in E. Margolis, S. Laurence, and S. Stich (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Cognitive Science, pp. 402-424. Oxford University Press (2012).

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Reprinted in A. Goldman, Joint Ventures: Mindreading, Mirroring, and Embodied Cognition (2014). 153. Goldman, Alvin and Blanchard, Thomas, "Social Epistemology," Oxford Bibliographies Online , Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford University Press (2012). Article number OBO-4101.R1. 154. "A Moderate Approach to Embodied Cognitive Science," Review of Philosophy and Psychology 3(1): 71-88 (2012). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Joint Ventures: Mindreading, Mirroring, and Embodied Cognition (2014). 155. Goldman, Alvin and Jordan, Lucy, "Mindreading by Simulation: The Roles of Imagination and Mirroring". In S. Baron-Cohen, M. Lombardo, and H. Tager-Flusberg, eds., Understanding Other Minds, 3rd edition, Oxford University Press (2013). Reprinted in A. Goldman, Joint Ventures: Mindreading, Mirroring, and Embodied Cognition (2014). 156. "Five Questions Answered," in D. Pritchard and V. Hendricks, eds., Social Epistemology: 5 Questions. New York: Automatic Press (2012). 157. "The Bodily-Formats Approach to Embodied Cognition," in Uriah Kriegel, ed. Current Controversies in Philosophy of Mind, pp. 91-108. Routledge (2014). 158. “Naturalizing Metaphysics with the Help of Cognitive Science," in K. Bennett and D. Zimmerman,

eds. Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, vol. 9 (2014). 159. “Social Process Reliabilism: Solving Justification Problems in Collective Epistemology,” in J. Lackey

(ed.), Essays in Collective Epistemolog (forthcoming). 160. “Reliabilism, Veritism, and Epistemic Consequentialism.” Episteme: A Journal of Individual and

Social Epistemology (forthcoming). Book Reviews and Book Symposium Commentaries 1. D.M. Armstrong, A Materialist Theory of the Mind, in The Journal of Philosophy (1970). 2. Steven Lukes, Power: A Radical View, in Theory and Decision (1977). 3. Jennifer Hornsby, Actions, in The Times Literary Supplement (July 11, 1980) 4. Richard Rorty, Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, in The Philosophical Review, 90: 424-429 (1981). 5. Robert Nozick, Philosophical Explanations, in The Philosophical Review, 92: 81-88 (1983). 6. Stephen Stich, The Fragmentation of Reason, in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 51:

189-193 (1991). 7. Christopher Peacocke, Being Known, in Mind (2001). 8. Helen Longino, The Fate of Knowledge, in Science 296: 2148-9 (2002). 9. Hilary Kornblith, Knowledge and Its Place in Nature, in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research

71: 403-410 (2005). 10. Sherrilyn Roush, “Recursive Tracking versus Process Reliabilism,” commentary on Tracking Truth, in

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Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 89(1): 222-229 (2009). 11. Larry Laudan, Truth, Error, and Criminal Law: An Essay in Legal Epistemology (reviewed with

Raphael Goldman), in Legal Theory 15(1): 1-12 (2009). 12. Jack Lyons, Perception and Basic Beliefs, book symposium commentary, in Philosophical Studies

153(3): 457-466 (2011). II. Selected Publications Organized by Topic [not up-to-date]

Individual Epistemology Epistemology and Cognition, Part I [Book 3] Liaisons: Philosophy Meets the Cognitive and Social Sciences, Part II [Book 4] Pathways to Knowledge, Parts I and II [Book 8] “A Causal Theory of Knowing” [Article 2] “Discrimination and Perceptual Knowledge” [Article 10] “Perceptual Objects” [Article 13] “What Is Justified Belief?” [Article 19] “The Internalist Conception of Justification” [Article 20] “Strong and Weak Justification” [Article 32] “Epistemic Folkways and Scientific Epistemology” [Article 46] “Naturalistic Epistemology and Reliabilism” [Article 62] “Internalism Exposed” [Article 83] “A Priori Warrant and Naturalistic Epistemology“ [Article 84] “The Unity of the Epistemic Virtues” [Article 98] “Immediate Justification and Process Reliabilism” [Article 132] “Williamson on Knowledge and Evidence” [Article 133] “Reliabilism and the Value of Knowledge” [Article 134] “Internalism, Externalism, and the Architecture of Justification” [Article 142] “Replies to Discussants” (on Reliabilism and Social Epistemology”) [Article 146] “Reliabilism, Veritism, and Epistemic Consequentialism” [Article 160]. Social Epistemology Knowledge in a Social World [Book 7] “Foundations of Social Epistemics” [Article 27] “Epistemic Paternalism: Communication Control in Law and Society” [Article 41] “An Economic Model of Scientific Activity and Truth Acquisition” [Article 43] “Argumentation and Social Epistemology” [Article 59] “Social Epistemology, Interests, and Truth” [Article 73] “Education and Social Epistemology” [Article 74] “Speech, Truth, and the Free Market for Ideas” [Article 75] “Games Lawyers Play: Legal Discovery and Social Epistemology” [Article 77] “Social Epistemology” [Article 95] “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?” [Article 99] “The Need for Social Epistemology” [Article 109] “Group Knowledge vs. Group Rationality: Two Approaches to Social Epistemology” [Article 111] “Social Epistemology, Theory of Evidence, and Intelligent Design: Deciding What to Teach” [Article 125] "Epistemic Relativism and Reasonable Disagreement" [Article 137] “Systems-Oriented Social Epistemology” [Article 144] “Why Social Epistemology Is Real Epistemology” [Article 151] “Social Process Reliabilism: Solving Justification Problems in Collective Epistemology” [Article 159].

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Cognitive Science and Philosophy Epistemology and Cognition, Part II [Book 3] Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science (Book 5] Philosophical Applications of Cognitive Science [Book 6] “Epistemics: The Regulative Theory of Cognition” [Article 15] “The Relation between Epistemology and Psychology” [Article 22] “Cognitive Science and Metaphysics” [Article 28] “Action and Free Will” [Article 34] “Cognition and Modal Metaphysics” [Article 45] “Ethics and Cognitive Science” [Article 51] “The Psychology of Folk Psychology” [Article 53] “Consciousness, Folk Psychology, and Cognitive Science” [Article 58] “Mirror Neurons and the Simulation Theory of Mind-Reading” [Article 81] “Can Science Know When You’re Conscious? Epistemological Foundations of Consciousness Research” [Article 89] “The Mentalizing Folk” [Article 90] “Desire, Intention, and the Simulation Theory” [Article 97] “The Sciences and Epistemology” [Article 105] “Simulationist Models of Face-Based Emotion Recognition” [Article 115] “Is Social Cognition Embodied?” (with Frederique de Vignemont) [Article 140] “A Moderate Approach to Embodied Cognitive Science”. [Article 154] “The Bodily Formats Approach to Embodied Cognition.” [Article 157]. “Mindreading by Simulation: The Roles of Imagination and Mirroring.” [Article 155]. Philosophy of Mind A Theory of Human Action, chaps. 3-4 [Book 1] “The Compatibility of Mechanism and Purpose” [Article 4] “The Volitional Theory Revisited” [Article 12] “Interpretation Psychologized” [Article 40] “In Defense of the Simulation Theory” [Article 50] “Empathy, Mind, and Morals” [Article 52] “Consciousness, Folk Psychology, and Cognitive Science” [Article 58] “Simulation and Interpersonal Utility” [Article 69] “Can Science Know When You’re Conscious?” [Article 89] “Folk Psychology and Mental Concepts” [Article 93] Metaphysics A Theory of Human Action, chaps. 1-2, 6 [Book 1] Philosophical Applications of Cognitive Science, chap. 4 [Book 6] “Actions, Predictions, and Books of Life” [Article 3] “The Individuation of Action” [Article 5] “Cognitive Science and Metaphysics” [Article 28] “Metaphysics, Mind, and Mental Science” [Article 38] “Cognition and Modal Metaphysics” [Article 45 “Naturalizing Metaphysics with the Help of Cognitive Science” [Article 158] Law and Philosophy Knowledge in a Social World, chaps. 7, 9 [Book 7] “Epistemic Paternalism: Communication Control in Law and Society” [Article 41] “Action and Crime: A Fine-Grained Approach” [Article 63] “Games Lawyers Play: Legal Discovery and Social Epistemology” [Article 77] “Quasi-Objective Bayesianism and Legal Evidence” [Article 102]

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Political Theory Knowledge in a Social World, chap. 10, “Democracy” [Book 7] “Toward a Theory of Social Power” [Article 6] “On the Measurement of Power” [Article 7] “Why Citizens Should Vote: A Causal Responsibility Approach” [Article 82] Philosophy of Science Philosophical Applications of Cognitive Science, chap. 2 [Book 6] Knowledge in a Social World, chap. 8 [Book 7] “An Economic Model of Scientific Activity and Truth Acquisition” [Article 43] “Psychological, Social, and Epistemic Factors in the Theory of Science” [Article 72] “Science, Publicity, and Consciousness” [Article 76] “Can Science Know When You’re Conscious?” [Article 89] Economics and Philosophy Knowledge in a Social World, chap. 7 [Book 7] “An Economic Model of Scientific Activity and Truth Acquisition” [Article 43] “Accuracy in Journalism: An Economic Approach” [Article 61] “Simulation and Interpersonal Utility” [Article 69] “Speech, Truth, and the Free Market for Ideas” [Article 75]

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Lectures at Colleges and Universities (through spring, 1987) University of Belgrade (Yugoslavia) Bowling Green University Brown University University of Chicago University of Cincinnati Cornell University Corpus Christi College, Oxford University of California, Berkeley University of California, Irvine University of California at Los Angeles University of California, Riverside University of California, Hayward University of California, Santa Barbara Duke University Harvard University University of Heidelberg University of Helsinki University of Illinois, Chicago Circle University of Illinois, Urbana Illinois State University University of Iowa Johns Hopkins University Kalamazoo College University of Kansas Kenyon College University of Miami (Florida) University of Michigan, Flint Michigan State University University of Minnesota, Morris University of Minnesota, Twin Cities University of Missouri, St. Louis University of Nebraska University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill University of North Carolina, Greensboro North Carolina State University Northwestern University Notre Dame University Oberlin College Ohio State University University of Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh Princeton University Purdue University Rice University San Jose State University Stanford University University of Stockholm Syracuse University Temple University University of Texas Texas Tech University University of Toronto Tuskegee Institute

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Uppsala University University of Utah Wake Forest University Washington University (St. Louis) Wayne State University Western Michigan University University of Western Ontario University of Wisconsin, Madison University of Wisconsin, Parkside University of Wyoming Yale University Invited Lectures or Symposia at Societies or Associations (not up-to-date) Eastern Division, American Philosophical Association (1971, 1978, 1987) Central Division, American Philosophical Association (1979, 1986, 1987, 1991) Pacific Division, American Philosophical Association (1974, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1994, 1995, 2009) Society for Philosophy and Psychology (numerous years) American Psychological Association (1992, 1995) Illinois Philosophical Association Society for Ethical and Legal Philosophy Society for Interdisciplinary Study of the Mind Philosophy of Science Association (1987, 1994) Association for Informal Logic and Critical Thinking (1992) Lectures and Presentations Since 1987 University of Notre Dame. Three lectures in week-long series. September 14-18, 1987. Stanford University, Rational Agency Unit of the Center for the Study of Language and Information. October 9, 1987. University of Leningrad, Soviet Union. October 20, 1987. (Part of an ACLS delegation to the U.S.S.R.) Princeton University, Cognitive Science Program. November 16, 1987. U.C.L.A. (1) Department of Philosophy (2) Cognitive Science Program. November 30, 1987. University of Utah, Department of Philosophy. December 4, 1987. University of Arizona, Institutional Analysis Program. December 8, 1987. Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association, New York. Invited symposium paper.

December 28, 1987. Linacre College, Oxford University. February 22, 1988. Trinity College, Dublin (Ireland). February 25, 1988. Birkbeck College, University of London. March 4, 1988. Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris. March 11, 1988. Bar-Ilan University, Israel. April 13, 1988. Van Leer Institute, Jerusalem, Israel, conference on the Chomskyan turn. April 14, 1988. Hebrew University, Israel, Department of Philosophy. April 18, 1988. Oriel College, Oxford University. May 3, 1988. University of Keele, England, Department of Philosophy. May 9, 1988. Oxford Philosophical Society, England. May 12, 1988. Society for Philosophy and Psychology, meeting in Chapel Hill, N.C. (Presidential Address) May 21,

1988. King's College, University of London. June 8, 1988. Rutgers University. October 25, 1989. University of California at San Diego. May 5, 1989. University College, London. May 17, 1989

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Cambridge University, Philosophy Seminar. May 18, 1989. Aristotelian Society, London. May 22, 1989. Cambridge University, Moral Sciences Club. May 23, 1989. University of Sheffield. May 26, 1989. Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia, Conference on Epistemology and Philosophy of Mind. Sept. 10, 1989. Northwestern University, February 15, 1990. Western Washington University, March 3, 1990. Rice University, April 22, 1990. University of Arizona Economics Dept., April 25, 1990. University of Alabama at Birmingham, May 15-16, 1990. Claremont Colleges, September 27-28, 1990. Alfred University (Myron Sibley lecture), April 4, 1991. Creighton Club (New York State Philosophy Association), keynote speaker, April 5, 1991. Society for Philosophy and Psychology, San Francisco, June 10, 1991. University of Valencia, Spain, June 20-21, 1991. Sociedad Filosofica Ibero-Americana, University of Salamanca, Spain, June 25, 1991. City University of New York Graduate Center, October 2, 1991 University of Connecticut, October 10, 1991 Yale University, Cognitive Science group, October 22, 1991 Wesleyan University, October 23, 1991 Cornell University, Philosophy Department, November 7, 1991

Cognitive Studies group, November 8, 1991 New York University, November 15, 1991 Wellesley College, Cognitive Science group, November 20, 1991 Yale University, Philosophy Department, December 4, 1991 Brown University, December 6, 1991 Yale University, Social Psychology group, December 9, 1991 Vassar College, Cognitive Science group, December 10, 1991 Association for Informal Logic and Critical Thinking, invited symposium paper, December 29, 1991 Presidential Address, "Empathy, Mind, and Morals," American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division,

March 28, 1992 John Dewey Lecture, University of Vermont, April 10, 1992 Invited symposiast, "The Simulation Theory vs. the Theory Theory," Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Montreal, June 14, 1992 Invited address, "Consciousness and the Concept of Mind," American Psychological Association (centennial meeting), August 15, 1992 California Institute of Technology, November 6, 1992 Washington University (St. Louis), February 18, 1993 University of California, San Diego, March 5, 1993 University of Iowa,

23rd annual Everett Hall Lecture, March 11, 1993 Department colloquium, March 12, 1993.

University of Dayton, conference keynote speaker, March 27, 1993. Invited symposiast, "Ethics and Cognitive Science," Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Vancouver,

B.C., June 2, 1993. NEH-sponsored summer institute on Knowledge, Teaching, and Wisdom, two lectures, Berkeley, CA, June 25, 1993. NEH-sponsored summer institute on Naturalism, two lectures, Lincoln, NE, June 30, 1993. Plenary lecturer, conference of the Australian Association of Philosophy, Adelaide (Australia), July 9,

1993. University of Otago (Dunedin, New Zealand), four seminar presentations, July 14, 20, 21, 22, 1993. University of Canterbury (Christchurch, New Zealand), July 16, 1993. Victoria University of Wellington (New Zealand), July 28, 1993. University of Auckland (New Zealand), July 30, 1993. Monash University, Melbourne (Australia), August 3, 1993. La Trobe University, Melbourne (Australia), August 4, 1993.

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Australian National University, Canberra, August 5, 1993. University of New South Wales, Sydney (Australia), August 6, 1993. University of Sydney (Australia), August 9, 1993. University of Miami (Florida), October 28-29 (2 lectures), 1993. University of Minnesota, lecture sponsored by the Department of Philosophy, Center for Philosophy of

Science, and Science and Technology unit, November 12, 1993. Tulane University, December 3-4 (two lectures), 1993. University of Washington (Seattle), Earl and Edna Stice endowed lectureship (public lecture plus assorted

colloquia and seminar presentations), February 14-25, 1994. American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division meeting, invited symposium paper, April 2, 1994. Washington University (St. Louis), invited symposium paper, conference on Mind and Morals, April 9,

1994. CREA group, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, June 20, 1994. Conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation (ISSA), Amsterdam, June 22, 1994. University of Pittsburgh Philosophy of Science Center, October 11, 1994. Philosophy of Science Association (New Orleans), invited symposium paper, October 15, 1994. University of West Virginia, November 3, 1994. Greater Philadelphia Philosophy Consortium, invited paper, mini- conference on naturalism, November

12, 1994. University of Utah, keynote paper at conference on social epistemology, January 27, 1995. University of Oklahoma, February 3, 1995. Princeton University, Philosophy Dept. colloquium, March 3, 1995. Joint session of the Philosophy of Education Society and the Pacific Division of the American Philosopical

Association, invited paper, San Francisco, April 1, 1995. University of Arizona Law College colloquium, April 20, 1995. University of Helsinki (Finland), May 5, 1995. University of Glasgow, keynote paper at conference on norms and reasoning, July 11, 1995. American Psychological Association, annual convention in New York City, invited paper, August 14, 1995. University of Wyoming, September 14, 1995. Yale Law School, Legal Theory Workshop, November 16, 1995. Southern Methodist University, March 1, 1996. Bowling Green State University, March 15, 1996. Notre Dame University, conference on intuitions in philosophy, April 19, 1996. Central States Philosophy Conference, keynote address and participation in symposium on my work, Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 11-12, 1996. Udall Center for Public Policy, University of Arizona, Nov. 4, 1996. University of Arkansas, Winthrop Rockefeller public lecture, Nov. 22, 1996 Conference on Metarepresentation, Vancouver, B.C., Canada, Feb.7, 1997 Brigham Young University, two seminars and a public talk for students, Feb. 27-28, 1997. Wayne State University, Gail Stine memorial lecture, March 20, 1997. University of Michigan, conference on naturalistic epistemology, March 21, 1997. American Philosophical Association, Central Division, Pittsburgh, PA., invited symposium paper, April 25,

1997. Franklin and Marshall College, conference on Philosophy and Cognitive Science, May 12, 1997. Concordia University, Montreal, Canada, two lectures, October 25-26, 1997. University of California, Berkeley, Boalt School of Law, Workshop on Rationality, paper presented on

democracy and information, Dec. 1, 1997. Rutgers University Center for Cognitive Science, presentation on the "mentalizing folk", April 3, 1998. University of Arizona, lecture series on "Building Academic Community," lecture entitled "Lies about

Truth," April 8, 1998. Bowling Green State University, Social Philosophy and Policy Center, conference on Responsibility,

paper presented on "Why Citizens Should Vote: A Causal Responsibility Approach," April 18, 1998.

Santa Fe Institute, conference on the Economics of Science. Talk presented on truth and the social studies of science. May 16, 1998.

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Conference on Language, Reasoning, and Cognition, hosted by theCentre pour Recherche en Epistemologie Applique, in Villard, France. Paper presented on "Science, Publicity, and Consciousness," June 18, 1998.

Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy, Boston, MA. Invited symposium paper, "Veritistic Social Epistemology," August 13, 1998.

Conference on Intentionality, Eugene, OR. Keynote paper, "Theory of Mind and Mind-Matching," October 2, 1998.

University of California at Santa Barbara, "Internalism Exposed," October 27, 1998. California State University, Northridge. The Seventh Philosophical Perspectives Lecture, "Rationalism, Empiricism, and Naturalism". October 28, 1998. American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division Meeting, invited symposium paper, "Epistemology

and Education: A Veritistic Approach", December 30, 1998. Syracuse University. Paper in honor of William Alston's retirement, "Internalism Exposed," February 13, 1999. University of Waterloo (Canada), Cognitive Science Program, "Can Science Tell When You're

Conscious?", March 16, 1999 University of Toronto, "Internalism Exposed," March 17, 1999. Carleton University (Canada), Cognitive Science Program, "Can Science Tell When You're Conscious?",

March 18, 1999. Oberlin College, Colloquium on skepticism, "Internalism Exposed," April 10, 1999. American Philosophical Association, Central Division Meeting, New Orleans, commentary on Stich and

Gigerenzer, symposium on reasoning and evolutionary psychology, May 5, 1999. Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness, London, Ontario (Canada), "Can Science Tell

When You're Conscious?", June 6, 1999. NEH Summer Seminar on theory of mind, St. Louis, MO, two lectures on "theory-theory vs. simulation

theory", June 24-25, 1999. Interamerican Congress of Philosophy, Puebla, Mexico, invited symposium paper "Social Epistemology,"

August 18, 1999. Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico City, Institute for Philosophical Investigations, "A Priori Warrant

and Naturalistic Epistemology," August 23, 1999. Centre pour Recherche en Epistemologie Applique, Paris, Conference on simulation theory, "Simulation Theory and the Grasp of Mental Concepts", September 29, 1999. University of North Carolina, conference on epistemology and legal evidence, "Truth and Testimony

Evidence in the Law", October 2, 1999. University of Arizona Philosophy Department's Salon Series, "Experts and Authorities: Whom Should You

Trust?", October 20, 1999. University of Arizona Consciousness Center, "Can Science Know When You're Conscious?

Epistemological Foundations of Consciousness Research", October 27, 1999. Conference on Virtue Epistemology, Santa Barbara, CA, "The Unity of the Epistemic Virtues," November

12, 1999. University of Arizona Cognitive Science Conference on Probability and Decision, "Quasi-Objective

Bayesianism and the Law of Evidence," February 12, 2000. Stanford University, Philosophy Colloquium, "Can Science Know When You're Conscious?", February 18,

2000. University of Arizona Political Science Department, "Why Citizens Should Vote," February 25, 2000. Philosophy of Social Sciences Conference, University of Missouri, St. Louis, "Experts: Which Ones

Should You Trust?", March 31, 2000. American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, response to Coady and Williams in "Author Meets

Critics" session on Knowledge in a Social World, April 7, 2000. Rutgers Epistemology Conference, "Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?", April 28, 2000. Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Columbia University, "Using Your Own Mind to Read Others,"

June 17, 2000. European Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Salzburg, Austria, “Using Your Own Mind to Read

Others,” September 4, 2000. University of Arizona, Romanell/Phi Beta Kappa public lectures, September 11, 14, 19 (2000).

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University of Arizona, Department of Sociology, September 20, 2000. CREA, Paris, France, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?”, October 20, 2000. University of Frankfurt, Germany, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?”, October 30, 2000. Center for Theoretical Studies, Prague, Czech Republic, “The Attractions of Simulation Theory,”

November 2, 2000. University of Graz, Austria, “The Unity of the Epistemic Virtues,” November 7, 2000. University of Salburg, Austria, “The Unity of the Epistemic Virtues,” November 8, 2000. University of Konstanz, Germany, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?”, plus comments on papers

at day-long symposium centered (partly) on my work, November 10, 2000. University of Genoa, Italy, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?”, November 13, 2000. University of Genoa, Italy, “The Attractions of Simulation Theory,” November 14, 2000. Institute of Human Physiology, Parma, Italy, “The Attractions of Simulation Theory,” November 16, 2000. CREA, Paris, France, “Companions of Simulation Theory,” November 24, 2000. Jowett Society, University of Oxford, England, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?”, November 27,

2000. Moral Sciences Club, Cambridge University, England, “Companions of Simulation Theory”, November 28,

2000. History and Philosophy of Science Department, Cambridge University, England, “Experts: Which Ones

Should You Trust?”, November 30, 2000. University of Paris IV (Sorbonne), “The Unity of the Epistemic Virtues”, December 1, 2000. Institute of Cognitive Science, Lyon, France, “Mindreading: A Simulationist Perspective,” Dec. 7, 2000. Bielefeld, Germany, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?”, Dec. 13, 2000 CREA, Paris, France, “Commentary on O’Shaughnessy on Attention,” (in French), Dec. 15, 2000. University of Nebraska, Lincoln, March 8-9, 2001 Cedric Evans Memorial Lecture, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?” Department colloquium, “Simulation Theory and Its Companions”. American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division (San Francisco). Symposium on the Berger Prize

Essay, “Games Lawyers Play”, March 31, 2001. University of Chicago, Analytical Legal Philosophy conference, “Quasi-Objective Bayesianism and Legal

Evidence”, April 7, 2001. Rutgers University, Center for Cognitive Science, “The Modularity Approach to Mindreading,” September,

2001. University of Wisconsin, “Philosophical and Empirical Aspects of the Simulation Theory”, October, 2001. University of Georgia, “Philosophical and Empirical Aspects of the Simulation Theory,” November, 2001. American Philosophical Association, Central Division (Chicago). Contribution to book symposium on

Timothy Williamson’s Knowledge and Its Limits, April, 2002. Royaumont Abbey, France, Conference on Imitation, “Imitation, Mindreading, and Simulation”, May 25,

2002. Macquarrie University, Sydney, Australia, “Conceptual Clarification and Empirical Evidence for the

Simulation Theory of Mindreading,” July 25, 2002. Australian National University, Canberra, Australia, “Conceptual Clarification and Empirical Evidence for

the Simulation Theory of Mindreading,” July 30, 2002. 25th International Wittgenstein Symposium, Kirchberg am Wechsel, Austria, “Conceptual Clarification and

Empirical Defense of the Simulation Theory of Mindreading” (Invited paper), August 15, 2002. City University of New York, Graduate Seminar in philosophy and cognitive science, “Conceptual

Clarification and Empirical Defense of the Simulation Theory of Mindreading,” September 15, 2002.

Porto, Portugal, Conference on Evolution and Rationality. “Evolution and the Simulation Theory of Mindreading”, September 28, 2002.

Japan Advanced Institute for Science and Technology, “What Is Knowledge and How Can There Be a Science of Knowledge?” October 22, 2002.

Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea. “The Simulation Theory of Mindreading,” October 25, 2002. Cardozo School of Law, Conference on Inference, Culture, and Ordinary Thinking in Dispute Resolution.

“Simple Heuristics and Legal Evidence”, April 29, 2003. University of Windsor (Canada), Conference on Informal Logic. “An Epistemological Approach to

Argumentation” (Keynote Address), May 17, 2003.

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Rutgers – Camden School of Law. Four lectures on epistemology, social epistemology, and the law. May 29, 2003.

European Society for Philosophy and Psychology, Turin, Italy. “Introspection”. July 7, 2003. University of Parma (Italy), Institute of Human Physiology, Department of Neuroscience. “Simulationist

Models of Face-Based Emotion Recognition,” July 22, 2003. University of Oregon, Interdisciplinary conference on Other Minds. “Emotion Mindreading, Simulation,

and Modularity”. September 27, 2003. San Francisco, American Society for Aesthetics, “Imagination, Simulation, and the Fictive Mind”. October

4, 2003. University of Delaware, “Trusting the Subject”, November 10, 2003. Pacific Division meeting, American Philosophical Association, Pasadena, CA. Symposium paper on

“Introspection”. March 25, 2004. Central Division meeting, American Philosophical Association, Chicago, IL. Symposium paper on the

“Evidential Status of Intuitions”. April 29, 2004. Mini-conference and “launch” of the journal Episteme. The British Academy, London. “Group Knowledge

vs. Group Rationality: Two Approaches to Social Epistemology”. June 4, 2004. Summer Institute on Cognitive Neuroscience, Dartmouth College. Lecture on “Simulation Theory,

Emotion Recognition, and Mirror Systems”. July 5, 2004. Conference on “Minor Entities”, Geneva, Switzerland. Paper on “Event Ontology and Cognitive Science”.

July 10, 2004. Conference on Intuitions, Fribourg, Switzerland. Paper on “Philosophical Intuitions: Their Target, Their

Source, and Their Epistemic Status”. November 4-6, 2004. Princeton University, Neuroscience of Social Decision-Making Seminar. Talk on “Emotion Recognition

and the Simulation Theory of Mindreading”. January 11, 2005. University of Lund, Sweden. Three lectures, including one in a workshop devoted to the philosophy of

Alvin Goldman. Lecture titles: “Simulating Minds,” “Philosophical Intuitions: Their Target, Their Source, and Their Epistemic Status,” and “Justification, Deference, and Two-Tiered Reliabilism”. May 24-25, 2005.

University of Bucharest, Romania. Conference on Analytic Philosophy. Talk entitled, “Simulation-Based Mindreading”. May 28-29, 2005.

Rutgers University, Camden. Rutgers Institute for Law and Philosophy, conference on “The Challenges of Philosophical Naturalism”. Paper presented, “Naturalistic Epistemology and Philosophical Analysis”. June 6-7, 2005.

University of Erfurt, Germany. Conference on “Philosophical Knowledge, Its Possibility and Scope”. Paper presented, “Philosophical Intuitions: Their Target, Their Source, and Their Epistemic Status,” September 8-10, 2005.

University of Memphis, Spindel conference on Social Epistemology. Keynote talk, “Social Epistemology, Theory of Evidence and Intelligent Design: Deciding What to Teach”, September 29-October 1, 2005.

Colorado State University. William O. Eddy Lecture (endowed University lectureship). “Teaching Intelligent Design: A Social Epistemological Approach”. October 20, 2005.

Illinois Philosophical Association, meeting at Eastern Illinois University. Keynote talk, “Philosophical Intuitions”, plus replies to symposium papers on my work on a priori warrant. November 5, 2005.

Institut Jean Nicod, Workshop on “Contributions of Mirroring Processes to Human Mindreading”. Chateau des Maffliers, France. Paper presented, “Mindreading and Two Kinds of Simulation”. December 8-11, 2005.

Rutgers University, Newark, Department of Psychology, “Mindreading and Two Kinds of Simulation,” February 3, 2006

University of Connecticut, Storrs, Department of Philosophy, “Philosophical Intuitions: Their Target, Their Source, and Their Evidential Status,” February 17, 2006

CUNY Graduate Center, Graduate Student Conference, Keynote Address, “Immediate Justification and Process Reliabilism,” February 25, 2006.

Washington University in St. Louis, March 8-9 (1) Medical School. “Mindreading and Two Types of Simulating” (2) Philosophy Department. “Mental Self-Attribution and Mental Concepts”

Pacific Division meeting of the American Philosophical Association, Portland, Oregon. Symposium paper

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in author-meets-critics session on Tracking Truth, by Sherrilyn Roush. March 23, 2006. Rutgers University, workshop on “Philosophical Foundations of Neuroimaging.” Chaired a symposium

featuring talks by J. Prinz and W. Bechtel. April 27-28, 2006. German Society for Analytical Philosophy (GAP), Berlin. “Rationality, Psychology, Epistemology,” invited

talk in a colloquium on “How Can Rationality Be Normative?” September 13, 2006. Rutgers University, Center for Cultural Analysis. Invited seminar presentation on my book, Simulating

Minds, as part of the Center’s project on “Mind and Culture.” October 31, 2006. Philosophy of Science Association (biennial meeting), Vancouver, Canada. Invited symposium paper,

“Can Introspective Reports Be Scientific Evidence?” November 4, 2006. London School of Economics, colloquium presentation to the “Choice” seminar. “Rationality, Psychology,

Epistemology”. November 9, 2006. Royal Institute of Philosophy, London. Invited lecture, “Social Epistemology – Theory and Applications”.

November 10, 2006. American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division meeting. Washington, D.C. Invited symposium

paper on “Epistemology after Gettier”. December 28, 2006. New York University. Colloquium on market institutions and economic processes. Presented paper

entitled “What Is Social Epistemology and How Can Economics Contribute to It?” January 22, 2007.

University of Kentucky, Lexington. Program in Cognitive Science. Presentation entitled “What Is the Simulation Theory of Mindreading and What Evidence Supports It?” February 16, 2007.

California State University, Long Beach, Conference on “Mirror Neurons and Cognition”. Presented talk called “Mirror Systems, Mental Simulation, and Mindreading,” February 22, 2007.

University of Delaware, Program in Cognitive Science. Presentation entitled “Empathy, Mindreading, and Other Dimensions of Social Cognition”. March 12, 2007.

University of Northern Illinois, DeKalb, IL. Department of Philosophy. Paper entitled, “Epistemic Relativism and Reasonable Disagreement”. March 23, 2007.

American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division meeting. San Francisco. Invited author-meets-critics symposium on my book, Simulating Minds. Precis and replies to critics. April 5, 2007.

College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, MA. Conference on “Understanding Other Minds and Moral Agency.” Presented talk entitled, “Two Routes to Empathy: Mirroring and Self-Projection”. April 20, 2007.

Princeton University, Conference in honor of Paul Benacerraf’s retirement. Paper entitled, “Epistemic Relativism and Reasonable Disagreement.” May 11, 2007

Bled, Slovenia. Bled Epistemology Conference. Paper entitled, “Epistemic Relativism and Reasonable Disagreement.” May 31, 2007.

University of Hertfordshire (UK). Conference on “Narrative Alternatives to Theories of Mind.” Paper entitled, “Primary Intersubjectivity and Narrative Discourse vs. Simulation Theory and Theory Theory”. July 13, 2007.

Free University of Amsterdam (Netherlands). Conference on “Knowledge, Belief, and Normativity.” Keynote paper entitled “Epistemic Norms and Values: What Are They and How are They Related?” August 27, 2007.

University of Stirling (Scotland). Conference on “Social Epistemology.” Keynote paper entitled “Why Social Epistemology is Real Epistemology.” August 31, 2007.

University of Calgary (Canada). Graduate student conference. Keynote address entitled “Why Social Epistemology is Real Epistemology.” September 29, 2007.

Texas A&M University. Paper to Dept of Philosophy, “Externalism and the Structure of Justification”. Talk to Glasscock Center, “What Is Social Epistemology?” October, 2008. (State) University (of New York) at Albany, Dept. of Philosophy. Paper entitled, “Externalism, Internalism,

and the Structure of Justification.” November, 2007/ American Association for the Advancement of Science (annual meeting, in Boston). Symposium on

“Whose Scientific Judgment? Recent Insights on Structuring Credibility.” Presentation entitled, “When Experts Collide”. February 17, 2008.

M.I.T. Workshop on Social Cognition (sponsored by Office of Naval Research). “Simulation and Social Cognition.” February 29, 2008.

Zheziang University, Hangzhou, People’s Republic of China. Two lectures: “Mindreading and Simulation” and “Social Epistemology.” March 17-18, 2008.

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University of Edinburgh, U.K., Nature of Knowledge Lecture, “Externalism, Internalism, and the Architecture of Justification.” April 8, 2008.

University of Wisconsin (Madison), Epistemology Conference, “Externalism, Internalism, and the Architecture of Justification.” May 3, 2008.

University of Duesseldorf, Germany. Reliable Knowledge and Social Epistemology: The Philosophy of Alvin Goldman (workshop). Responded to 12 speakers’ papers on my work, plus a lecture of my own, “Externalism, Internalism, and the Architecture of Justification.” May 19-20, 2008. Proceedings in Grazer Philosophische Studien and Schurz and Werning, eds., Reliable Knowledge and Social Epistemoloy: Essays on the Philosophy of Alvin Goldman.

Ruhr-University at Bochum, Germany, “Simulation and Mindreading.” May 21, 2008. World Congress of Philosophy, Seoul, Korea. Invited symposium lecture: “Perspectives on Social

Epistemology.” August 4, 2008. University of Nottingham, UK, Workshop on Theory of Mind (30th anniversary event). “Mindreading and

Two Types of Simulation.” September 11, 2008. Turin, Italy, Rosselli Foundation workshop on “Mirror Neurons and Social Cognition.” Presentation of “Is

Social Cognition Embodied?” September 24, 2008. University of Rochester (philosophy). Graduate student conference, keynote address. “How Reliabilism

and Evidentialism Might Assist One Another; Or, Evidentialism’s Troubles, Reliabilism’s Rescue Package.” October 11, 2008.

University of Copenhagen (Denmark). Conference on the Epistemology of Liberal Democracy. Invited (keynote) paper entitled, “Systems-Oriented Social Epistemology and Liberal Democracy.” November 20, 2008.

Northwestern University, Cognitive Science Program. “Epistemology and Psychology.” February 10, 2009.

Brown University, (Philosophy Department) “Toward a Synthesis of Reliabilism and Evidentialism”; (Cognitive Science group) Discussion of Simulating Minds. February 19-20, 2009.

Mexico City, Mexico. Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), “Internalism, Externalism, and the Architecture of Justification.” Metropolitan University of Mexico (UAM). “Toward a Synthesis of Reliabilism and Evidentialism,” February 26-27, 2009.

Union College (Schenectady, NY). “Toward a Synthesis of Reliabilism and Evidentialism,” March 5, 2009. University of Bristol, UK. Conference on “Minds, Brains, and Beyond” (in Memory of Susan Hurley). “Is

Social Cognition Embodied?” March 20-22, 2009. Swedish National Congress of Philosophy, Keynote lecture, “Toward a Synthesis of Reliabilism and

Evidentialism." Lund, Sweden, June 12, 2009. American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division Meeting, Vancouver, BC, Canada. Invited

symposium paper, “Systems-Oriented Social Epistemology.” April 9, 2009. Summer Institute for Diversity in Philosophy, Rutgers University, “Social Epistemology,” July 7, 2009. Australian Radio Station ABC, Interview about (roughly) “Blogging, the Conventional Media, and Social

Epistemology,” August 15, 2009. Cologne University (Germany). Summer School in Philosophy. Five lectures delivered to the Summer

School (50 participants from 10 countries) on the general theme of “Reliabilism and Social Epistemology”. Plus a public lecture at the University, entitled “Ways of Knowing: Personal, Interpersonal, and Collective.” August 24-28, 2009.

German radio station (Deutschlandfunk) interview on the theme “Knowledge is a Social Good,” broadcast September 3, 2009.

Congress of the (French) Society for Philosophy of Science, on the topic, “Theory of Choice.” Invited plenary lecture, “The Social Epistemology of Science: Is It Different?” Paris, November 13, 2009.

American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division. Romanell Lecture, "Philosophical Naturalism and Intuitional Methodology." April 2, 2010.

"Collective Epistemology: The Epistemic Lives of Groups," conference in London, UK. Paper entitled "Collective Epistemic States: Let Me Count the Kinds." March 10-11, 2011.

American Philosophical Association, Central Division, Memorial Symposium for William Alston, Minneapolis, April 2, 2011. Paper entitled "Ruminations in the Spirit of Alston's Epistemic Pluralism".

"Cloud Computing and Trust," conference at Cambridge University, UK. Paper entitled "Social Epistemology and Collective Epistemic Agents." April 5-6, 2011.

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Archives Poincare, University of Nancy, France. Mini-conference on social epistemology. Lecture entitled "Social Epistemology, Collective Agents, and Scientific Networks." April 8, 2011.

ANU, "Perceptual Capacities" Workshop. "Embodied Cognition and Perceptual Capacities." July15, 2011

ANU, Jack Smart Lecture, "Philosophical Naturalism and Intuitional Methodology," July 19, 2011. Kirchberg, Austria (Wittgenstein Symposium). Plenary lecture, "Social Epistemology and Democratic

Theory", August 11, 2011 Copenhagen, Denmark. Conference on Social Epistemology and Epistemic Trust. "Social Epistemology

and Democratic Theory," August 16, 2011. University of North Florida. Conference on "The Ethics of Belief." Talk entitled "Negative Epistemology,

Epistemic Value, and Social Epistemology." October 14, 2011. St. Louis University, Graduate Student Conference on Social Epistemology. Talk entitled, "Don't Be a

Know-It-All: Why Social Epistemology Can and (Sometimes) Should Promote Ignorance." October 20, 2011.

Rutgers University Center for Cognitive Science. "A Moderate Approach to Embodied Cognitive Science." October 25, 2011.

University of Pennsylvania, Department of Philosophy, "Don't Be a Know-It-All: Why Social Epistemology Can and (Sometimes) Should Promote Ignorance." December 1, 2011.

University of Arizona, Cognitive Science Program and Department of Philosophy, Robert M. Harnish Memorial Lecture, "A Moderate Approach to Embodied Cognitive Science." February 3, 2012.

Central Division Meeting of the APA, Chicago, Illinois. Contribution to symposium on Group Epistemology, entitled "Troubles for Collective Epistemology." February, 17, 2012

College de France, Paris. First of two lectures on Social Epistemology. "Troubles for Collective Epistemology." March 9, 2012.

College de France, Paris. Second of two lectures on Social Epistemology. "Democracy, Knowledge, and Power." March 19, 2012.

King's College London, Philosophical Society. "Troubles for Collective Epistemology," March 13, 2012. London School of Economics and Political Science, Choice Group (in Philosophy Department).

"Democracy, Knowledge, and Power," March 14, 2012. Jean Nicod Institute, Paris. Workshop on "Vicarious Experiences." Talk entitled "Mindreading by

Simulation: The Roles of Imagination and Mirroring." March 12, 2012. Pacific Division Meeting of the APA, Seattle, Washington. Author-meets-critics symposium on Peter

Carruthers's book, The Opacity of Mind. April 7, 2012. University of Alabama (Tuscaloosa), April 26-27, 2012 (1) Philosophy Today Lecture: "Knowledge and Democracy -- How Social Epistemology Bears on

the Success of Our Democracy" (2) "A Moderate Approach to Embodied Cognitive Science," (Philosophy Department) Delft University of Technology (Netherlands). Episteme-sponsored conference on the Epistemology of

Privacy and Secrecy. "Pure Theories of Epistemic Value and Conduct: Problems of Privacy and Secrecy." June 10, 2012.

Society for Philosophy and Psychology, University of Colorado, Boulder. Symposium on Epistemology and Psychology. "Epistemology for the Real Human Mind-Brain." June 23, 2012.

Arche Institute, St. Andrews University, Scotland. Workshop on Intuitions in Philosophy. Talk entitled, "Psychology and Epistemology: The Case of Classification Judgments." June, 30, 2012.

NEH Summer Institute on Experimental Philosophy, Tucson, AZ. "Philosophical Naturalism and Intuitional Methodology." July 12, 2012.

Institute for Cognitive Science, Lyon, France. Symposium in honor of Marc Jeannerod. Talk entitled "Toward a More Fruitful Conception of Embodied Cognition" (presented by a substitute). October 30, 2012.

New York University. Workshop on the Modularity of Perception. Commentary on Sally Linkenauger. December 2, 2012.

Jean Nicod Institute, Paris. Culture, Communication and Cognition: Conference in honor of Dan Sperber. Talk entitled "Argument, Argumentation, and Knowledge Promotion". December 13, 2012.

Eastern Division, American Philosophical Association, Atlanta, GA. Symposium on "Gettier at 50". Talk entitled, "Gettier and the Epistemology of Philosophical Intuitions". December 28, 2012.

University of Miami, Conference on Epistemology. Keynote address: "Varieties of Epistemic Relativism,"

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January 11, 2013. Rutgers University, Graduate School of Education, Epistemic Cognition Conference. Delivered talk on

"Process Reliabilism and Social Epistemology." Feb. 1-2, 2013. Ohio University. Delivered three lectures on (1) democracy, (2) social epistemology, and (3) mirroring

and mindreading. March 14-15, 2013. Swarthmore College. Conference on "Gettier at 50". Delivered talk on "Knowledge after Gettier". April

13, 2013. Bled, Slovenia, Conference on "Evidence, Reliabilism, and Social Epistemology." Delivered talk on

"Social Process Reliabilism." June 6, 2013. Princeton University, philosophy graduate seminar. Discussed my paper, "How to Naturalize

Metaphysics with the Help of Cognitive Science." University of Pennsylvania, political philosophy graduate seminar. Delivered and discussed material on

Democracy and Knowledge. Salvador, Brazil, Inter-American Congress of Philosophy. Delivered talk on "Social Process Reliabilism:

Justification Problems in Collective Epistemology." October 9, 2013. St. Andrews University, Arche Research Centre, Workshop on Social Epistemology. Delivered paper,

"Social Process Reliabilism: Justification Problems in Collective Epistemology." October 19, 2013.

Midwest Epistemology Workshop, University of Notre Dame. Keynote Address: "Reliabilism, Veritism, and Epistemic Teleology." November 8, 2013.

Costa Rica, Episteme conference for 10th anniversary issue. Delivered talk on "Reliabilism and Epistemic Teleology." January 2, 2014.

Duke University, Department of Philosophy, "Naturalizing Metaphysics with the Help of Cognitive Science." January 17, 2014.

Syracuse University, Second Annual William P. Alston lecture. "Naturalizing Metaphysics with the Help of Cognitive Science." February 22, 2014.

Pitt-CMU Graduate Student Conference. Keynote address: "Naturalizing Metaphysics with the Help of Cognitive Science." March 22, 2014.

Rutgers-Lund Philosophy Conference, Rutgers, University. “Social Process Reliabilism.” April 17, 2014. Berkeley, California, Guest speaker for Radio Show “Philosophy Talk”. Topic: Intuitions. June 22, 2014. Xiamen University, China. Inaugural Meeting of the Chinese Society for Epistemology, Keynote Address.

“The Evidential Status of Philosophical Intuitions.” .June 30, 2014.