About
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Research
Research interests
- Epistemology
- Kant and Contemporary Kantian Philosophy
- Philosophy of Practical Reason
- General Philosophy of Mind
- Philosophy of Neurodiversity
Current research
I am currently working on several projects: (1) I am further developing Epistemic Kantianism in my book project Respect for Truth: A Kantian Account of Theoretical Normativity, which is nearing completion. (2) I am working on reviving a traditional account of knowledge as a world-presenting mental relation, and exploring the role of this account of knowledge in classical Indian epistemology. (3) I am working with Claire Field on the philosophy of neurodiversity, and also exploring the implications of neurodiversity for philosophy of mind and epistemology with Andrew Stephenson. (4) I am working on a new edition of the Blackwell Companion to Epistemology.
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Research groups
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Research interests
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Current research
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Research projects
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Publications
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Supervision
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Teaching
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Courses and modules
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Biography
Dr Kurt Sylvan is an Associate Professor in Philosophy at the University of Southampton.
I joined the department in January 2014, initially as a post-doctoral lecturer in the Normativity: Epistemic and Practical project, but becoming permanent in 2015.
I finished my PhD at Rutgers in 2014. Ernest Sosa was my advisor and Ruth Chang, Jonathan Dancy, Alvin Goldman, and Susanna Schellenberg were on my committee. My dissertation was entitled On the Normativity of Epistemic Rationality. It sought to explain why we should care about being epistemically rational by appealing to the idea that it constitutes respect for truth. This project quickly transformed into a larger one that seeks to explain why perspectival obligations have perspective-transcendent significance, by appealing to (i) the idea that all value calls fundamentally for respect, and (ii) the idea that respect is constituted by heeding the demands of perspective.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, my longest-standing area of specialization is epistemology. I have more recent research interests in moral philosophy, political philosophy, and the philosophy of practical reason. I have also taught modules in other areas, including the history of philosophy, aesthetics, philosophy of mind, and metaphysics. Much of my research combines my interests in epistemology in the broad sense and ethics. I'm currently finishing a book which systematizes the non-consequentialist epistemology that I first developed in several papers (including one just published in Philosophical Review). This view, which I call Epistemic Kantianism, is based on the idea of respect for truth I introduced in my dissertation.
My work in epistemology in the narrow sense (i.e., the theory of knowledge) is mostly separate from this business. For I think epistemology in the narrow sense is non-normative. I defended this view in 'Knowledge as a Non-Normative Relation', and have a series of papers in progress further developing this view.
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Prizes
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