Acknowledgments
About the Contributors
Justin Vlasits and Katja Maria Vogt, Introduction
Appearances and perception
1: John Morrison, Perceptual Relativism: Ancient and
Contemporary
2: Kathrin Glüer, Illusory Looks
3: Megan Feeney and Susanna Schellenberg, Bayesian Liberalism
4: MGF Martin, Variation and Change in Appearances
5: Peter Pagin, The Force of Assumptions and Self-Attributions
The structure of justification and proof
6: Marko Malink, Hypothetical Syllogisms and Infinite Regress
7: Jessica N. Berry, Sextan Skepticism and the Rise and Fall of
German Idealism
8: Duncan Pritchard, Wittgensteinian Epistemology, Epistemic
Vertigo, and Pyrrhonian Skepticism
Belief and ignorance
9: Kathryn Tabb, "The Skeptical Physitian": Locke, Pyrrhonism, and
the Case against Innate Ideas
10: Don Garrett, Pyrrhonian Skepticism and Humean Skepticism:
Belief, Evidence, and Causal Power
11: Justin Vlasits, The First Riddle of Induction: Sextus Empiricus
and the Formal Learning Theorists
12: Jens Haas and Katja Maria Vogt, Incomplete Ignorance
Ethics and action
13: Richard Bett, Echoes of Sextus Empiricus in Nietzsche?
14: Sergio Tenenbaum, Value Disagreement, Action, and
Commitment
References
Index
Katja Maria Vogt is Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University.
She specializes in ancient philosophy, ethics, and normative
epistemology. In her books and papers, she focuses on questions
that figure both in ancient and in contemporary discussions: What
are values? What kind of values are knowledge and truth? What does
it mean to want one's life to go well?
Justin Vlasits is Assistant Professor at the University of
Tübingen. He obtained his PhD from the University of California,
Berkeley and specializes in ancient philosophy as well as
contemporary epistemology and logic. In his research, he is
particularly interested in questions about inquiry, knowledge, and
method from both historical and contemporary perspectives.
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