6.16 Experts
Keywords: experts, socrates, expert, report, george, credibility, authority, acceptable, prefer, matters, practice, counter, aesthetic, power, position
Number of articles: 37
Weighted number of articles: 28.33926
Characteristic Articles
- Michael Welbourne, 1983, “A Cognitive Thoroughfare,” Mind 92:410–2.
- Gregory Vlastos, 1982, “The Socratic Elenchus,” Journal of Philosophy 79:711–4.
- James W. Cornman, 1978, “On the Certainty of Reports About What is Given,” Noûs 12:93–118.
- John Hardwig, 1985, “Epistemic Dependence,” Journal of Philosophy 82:335–49.
- Sven Rosenkranz, 2007, “Agnosticism as a Third Stance,” Mind 116:55–104.
- Fred I. Dretske, 1982, “A Cognitive Cul-De-Sac,” Mind 91:109–11.
- Alvin I. Goldman, 2001, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 63:85–110.
- Gregory Vlastos, 1985, “Socrates’ Disavowal of Knowledge,” The Philosophical Quarterly 35:1–31.
- Jonathan E. Adler, 2009, “Resisting the Force of Argument,” Journal of Philosophy 106:339–64.
- Stephen John, 2011, “Expert Testimony and Epistemological Free-Riding: The Mmr Controversy,” The Philosophical Quarterly 61:496–517.
Highly Cited Articles
- Alvin I. Goldman, 2001, “Experts: Which Ones Should You Trust?,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 63:85–110. (0.7750365)
- Miranda Fricker, 1998, “Rational Authority and Social Power: Towards a Truly Social Epistemology,” Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 98:159–77. (0.5251558)
- Peter J. Graham, 1997, “What is Testimony?,” The Philosophical Quarterly 47:227–32. (0.362016)