About Certain Doubts

Certain Doubts, a blog devoted to matters epistemic, began on June 9, 2004. The blog was originally sponsored by the University of Missouri when its administrator Jonathan L. Kvanvig was professor of philosophy and chair of the philosophy department there. It has since moved to Baylor University, being housed there since the fall of 2006. The list of contributors is a who’s who of contemporary epistemology, and any epistemologists who are not on the list should feel free to contact the site administrator if they wish to be a contributor.


Comments

About Certain Doubts — 7 Comments

  1. spacer Tom Duncan on said:

    Jon,

    I am checking out your “things epistemic” blog. Good job!

    Reply
  2. spacer kvanvig on said:

    Since no one here other than me will know who Tom is: Tom is a friend of mine from the late 70′s, and once he and I scored 70 points between the two of us in a basketball game (sadly for my reputation, 47 for him…)! Yes, we won: 83-47, I think…

    Reply
  3. spacer Pedro on said:

    Brilliant! I’m an MA student at the Uni of London studying epistemology. This will be a VERY useful resource. Well done to all involved.

    Reply
  4. spacer Grand'Maison on said:

    It is 5 AM and I can’t go to sleep: your articles are coffee (that means good). As a French Canadian it is relatively hard for me to keep an analytical environment, and your blog might just change that. Thank you!

    Reply
  5. spacer Grand'Maison on said:

    It is 5 AM and I can’t go to sleep: your articles are coffee (that means good). As a French Canadian it is relatively hard for me to keep an analytical environment, and your blog might just change that. Thank you!

    Reply
  6. spacer Grand'Maison on said:

    It is 5 AM and I can’t go to sleep: your articles are coffee (that means good). As a French Canadian it is relatively hard for me to keep an analytical environment, and your blog might just change that. Thank you!

    Reply
  7. spacer Grand'Maison on said:

    It is 5 AM and I can’t go to sleep: your articles are coffee (that means good). As a French Canadian it is relatively hard for me to keep an analytical environment, and your blog might just change that. Thank you!

    Reply

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