Contenu du sommaire
Revue | Social Epistemology : A Journal of knowledge, culture and policy |
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Numéro | Vol.33, n°1-2, 2019 |
Numéro 1
Articles
- Black Live Matter or All Lives Matter? Color-blindness and Epistemic Injustice - Ashley Atkins p. 1-22
- The Emergence of Intersectional Disadvantage - Cailin O'Connor, Liam Kofi Bright & Justin P. Bruner p. 23-41
- Sham Epistemic Authority and Implicit Racial Bias - Charles Lassiter p. 42-60
- Epistemically Pernicious Groups and the Groupstrapping Problem - Kenneth Boyd p. 61-73
- What Experts Could Not Be - Jamie Carlin Watson p. 74-87
- The Disastrous Implications of the "English" View of Rationality in a Social World - Seungbae Park p. 88-99
Numéro 2
Articles
- Venting as Epistemic Work - Juli Thorson & Christine Baker p. 101-110
- Testifying Bodies: Testimonial Injustice as Derivatization - Carolyn M. Cusick p. 111-123
- Agnotology, Gender, and Engineering: An Emergent Typology - Kacey Beddoes p. 124-136
- Exploring the Image of Science in the Business Sector: Surveying and Modeling Scientific Culture, Perception and Attitudes Towards Science - Jesús Rey Rocha, Ana Muñoz-van den Eynde & Irene López-Navarro p. 137-159
- Why the Fence Is the Seat of Reason When Experts Disagree - Martin Hinton p. 160-171
- For A Service Conception of Epistemic Authority: A Collective Approach - Michel Croce p. 172-182
- Expertise, Agreement, and the Nature of Social Scientific Facts or: Against Epistocracy - Julian Reiss p. 183-192