Aidan McGlynn University of Edinburgh
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  • Research staff, University of Edinburgh
  • PhD, University of Texas at Austin, 2010.

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About me
In September 2012 I join the philosophy department at the University of Edinburgh as a Chancellor's Fellow. I did my PhD at the University of Texas at Austin, where I was supervised by Mark Sainsbury. Before I moved to Austin I was an undergraduate and a masters student in the philosophy department at the University of St Andrews. I work mostly on issues in epistemology, philosophy of language and, increasingly, philosophy of mind. Online versions of published papers can be found on my Academia.edu page.
My works
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  1. Aidan McGlynn (2013). Believing Things Unknown. Noûs 47 (2):385-407.
  2. Aidan McGlynn (2012). Interpretation and Knowledge Maximization. Philosophical Studies 160 (3):391-405.
    Timothy Williamson has proposed that we should give a ‘knowledge first’ twist to David Lewis’s account of content, maintaining that for P to be the content of one’s belief is for P to be the content that would be attributed by an idealized interpreter working under certain constraints, and that the fundamental constraint on interpretation is a principle of knowledge maximization. According to this principle, an interpretation is correct to the extent that it maximizes the number of knowledgeable judgments the (...)
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  3. Aidan McGlynn (2012). Justification as 'Would-Be' Knowledge. Episteme 9 (4):361-376.
    In light of the failure of attempts to analyse knowledge as a species of justified belief, a number of epistemologists have suggested that we should instead understand justification in terms of knowledge. This paper focuses on accounts of justification as a kind of knowledge. According to such accounts a belief is justified just in case any failure to know is due to uncooperative external circumstances. I argue against two recent accounts of this sort due to Alexander Bird and Martin Smith. (...)
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  4. Aidan McGlynn (2012). The Opacity of Mind: An Integrative Theory of Self-Knowledge. By Peter Carruthers. (Oxford UP, 2011. Pp. 456. Price £30.00.). [REVIEW] Philosophical Quarterly 62 (248):635-637.
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  5. Aidan McGlynn (2012). The Problem of True-True Counterfactuals. Analysis 72 (2):276-285.
    Early commentators on David Lewis's account of counterfactuals noted that certain examples suggest that some counterfactuals with true antecedents and true consequents are false. Lewis's account has the consequence that all such counterfactuals are true, leaving us to choose between explaining away our intuitions about the examples in question or offering an alternative to Lewis's account. Here I argue that a simple modification of the familiar Lewisian truth conditions yields the intuitively correct verdicts about these examples, and so we can (...)
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  6. Aidan McGlynn (2011). Review of Anthony Hatzimoysis (Ed.), Self-Knowledge, Oxford University Press. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.
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