Steven Reynolds
- Assoc Professor
- SHPRS
- Faculty
- Steven.Reynolds@asu.edu
Bio
Associate Professor, Faculty of Philosophy, School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Bio
Dr. Reynolds has been working on the idea that attributions of knowledge function as praise for acceptable testimony. He thinks this has interesting consequences for issues regarding the value of knowledge as compared to true belief, the nature of justification, the internalism/externalism controversy, skepticism, etc. In metaphysics he argues that the word "real" and variants mainly function to indicate that we are not merely reporting what is represented (elsewhere) to be so, but are reporting on or talking about the world. This has interesting consequences for the best ways to characterize the realism/antirealism issue and what anti-realism ought to be. In philosophy of perception he has argued for an intentionalist response to the argument from illusion and also has proposed an account of perceptual justification as involving knowing how.
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