Justifying Memory, Cambridge University Press (under contract).
19. “Advice to Christian Philosophers, 40 Years Later,” (with Christian B. Miller, Meghan Sullivan, Devin Gouvea, Gregory Robson, and Philip Swenson) Faith and Philosophy (forthcoming).
18. "Remembering Trauma in Epistemology," Philosophy and the Mind Sciences 5 (23): 1–18 (2024).
17. “Epistemological Problems of Memory,” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, edited by Edward N. Zalta & Uri Nodelman (2023).
16. "You Don't Know What Happened," Current Controversies in Philosophy of Memory, edited by André Sant’Anna, Christopher Jude McCarroll, and Kourken Michaelian (Routledge, 2022).
15. "Forgetting Memory Skepticism," (with Kevin McCain ) Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 103 (2): 253-263 (2021).
14. “Reliabilism’s Memory Loss,” The Philosophical Quarterly 71 (3): 565–585 (2021).
13. "Upping the Ex Ante Problem for Reliabilism," Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 100 (4): 1047-1054 (2019).
12. "The Reliability Problem for Reliabilism," Philosophical Studies 175 (4): 923-945 (2018). (Jeff Tolly replies here)
11. "Eliminating the Problem of Stored Beliefs," American Philosophical Quarterly 55 (1): 63-79 (2018).
10. "Forgetting," New Directions in the Philosophy of Memory, edited by Kourken Michaelian, Dorothea Debus, and Denis Perrin (Routledge, 2018).
9. "Metacognition as Evidence for Evidentialism," Believing in Accordance with the Evidence: New Essays on Evidentialism, edited by Kevin McCain (Springer, 2018).
8. "Preservationism in the Epistemology of Memory," The Philosophical Quarterly 67 (268): 486-507 (2017).
7. "No Need to Know," Philosophical Studies 174 (2): 391-401 (2017). (As a blog post here)
6. "Internalism and the Problem of Stored Beliefs," Erkenntnis 82 (2): 285-304 (2017).
5. "Epistemology of Memory," Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, edited by James Fieser and Bradley Dowden (2015).
4. "Speaking Freely: On Free Will and the Epistemology of Testimony," Synthese 191 (7): 1587-1603 (2014).
3. "What God Only Knows: A Reply to Rob Lovering," Religious Studies 50 (2): 245-254 (2014).
2. "The Mad, Bad, or God Argument Explained," Religious Studies 49 (4): 581-589 (2013).
1. "Moore’s Anti-Skeptical Arguments," Just the Arguments: 100 of the Most Important Arguments in Western Philosophy, edited by Steven Barbone and Michael Bruce. (Wiley-Blackwell, 2011).
2. Review of Kourken Michaelian, Mental Time Travel: Episodic Memory and Our Knowledge of the Personal Past (MIT Press, 2016), in The Philosophical Quarterly 68 (271): 414-416 (2018).
1. Review of William Wainwright, Reason, Revelation, and Devotion: Inference and Argument in Religion (Cambridge University Press, 2016), in Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, (2016).
I'm still thinking about memory. I'm under contract with Cambridge University Press to write a book on the epistemology of it.
I have a paper on the nature of divine knowledge in the works. I'd like to have a paper on prayer in the works.
I'm also thinking about moral psychology and memory. Forgiving a wrong-doer appears to require memory of wrong-doing. Currently I'm working on a paper that argues this appearance is misleading.
Of course I continue to campaign against process reliabilism. Expect me to double-down on showing reliabilism really does have a temporality problem.