All Stories

  1. Political Conflict Frames
  2. Toward an understanding of collective intellectual humility
  3. Development of practical tools to realize the epistemic responsibilities of universities: a co-design study
  4. Kunnen goed geïnformeerde burgers wel betrokken burgers zijn?
  5. The core epistemic responsibilities of universities: Results from a Delphi study
  6. The Online Battlefield: How Conflict Frames in Political Advertisements Affect Political Participation in a Multiparty Context
  7. In Defense of the Netherlands Research Integrity Code: Response to Radder
  8. Online Illusions of Understanding
  9. Introduction
  10. How to trust a scientist
  11. Online and Offline Battles: Usage of Different Political Conflict Frames
  12. Group belief reconceived
  13. What's so bad about misinformation?
  14. Deep Disagreements and Political Polarization
  15. Is Fake News Old News?
  16. General introduction
  17. The point of political belief
  18. The Routledge Handbook of Political Epistemology
  19. Common Sense and Ontological Commitment
  20. Academia’s Big Five: a normative taxonomy for the epistemic responsibilities of universities
  21. Introduction
  22. Scientific Challenges to Common Sense Philosophy
  23. Value pluralism in research integrity
  24. Academia’s Big Five: a normative taxonomy for the epistemic responsibilities of universities
  25. How Many Scientists Does It Take to Have Knowledge?
  26. Against Quasi-Fideism
  27. Representations and Robustly Collective Attitudes
  28. Scientism
  29. Introduction
  30. Kinds of Knowledge, Limits of Science
  31. The Epistemic Status of Evolutionary Theory
  32. Design Hypotheses Behave Like Skeptical Hypotheses
  33. The Future of Creation Order
  34. Erratum
  35. Introduction to the Philosophy of Creation Order, with Special Emphasis on the Philosophy of Herman Dooyeweerd
  36. Laura Frances Callahan and Timothy O’Connor, eds., Religious Faith and Intellectual Virtue
  37. Scientism: The New Orthodoxy
  38. DESIGN DISCOURSE AND THE COGNITIVE SCIENCE OF DESIGN
  39. Introduction to Special Issue
  40. Referring To, Believing In, and Worshipping the Same God
  41. Epistemic dependence and collective scientific knowledge
  42. IS THERE EPISTEMIC JUSTIFICATION FOR SECRECY IN SCIENCE?
  43. Why Only Externalists Can Be Steadfast
  44. Unsafe Assertions
  45. Willem B. Drees, Religion and Science in Context: A Guide to the Debates. London & New York 2010: Routledge. viii + 168 pages. ISBN 9780415556170.
  46. Epistemology socialized
  47. Alvin Plantinga and Michael Tooley, Knowledge of God. Malden, MA / Oxford 2008: Blackwell. x + 270 pages. ISBN 9780631193647.
  48. Bradley Monton, Seeking God in Science: An Atheist Defends Intelligent Design. Peterborough, ON & Buffalo, NY 2009: Broadview Press. 177 pages. ISBN 9781551118635.
  49. Religious exclusivism unlimited
  50. Jonathan L. Kvanvig (ed.), Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion, Volume I. Oxford 2008: Oxford University Press. viii + 272 pages. ISBN 9780199542666.
  51. Marcel Sarot, De goddeloosheid van de wetenschap: Theologie, geloof en het gangbare wetenschapsideaal. Zoetermeer 2006: Meinema. 159 pagina’s. ISBN 9789021141336.
  52. KAN GOD EEN GOEDE VERKLARING ZIJN? OVER THEÏSTISCHE VERKLARINGEN IN DE WETENSCHAP
  53. Mechanistic artefact explanation