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John Waterman

John Waterman, Ph.D.

Associate Teaching Professor

Location

Marcil Hall 305
Biddeford Campus

John Waterman is an Associate Teaching Professor in Philosophy. He teaches courses on bioethics, the intellectual history of ideas, and on the experimental philosophy of mind. A native New Englander, he recently moved back to Maine with his wife Barbara, and their three children Ida, Hazel, and Noel. He received an M.Sc. in the philosophy of science from The London School of Economics and a Ph.D. in philosophy from The Johns Hopkins University.

Credentials

Education

B.A.
Vassar College
M.Sc.
The London School of Economics
Ph.D.
The Johns Hopkins University

Post-Doctoral Training

Fellowship, NEH Fellowship in Experimental Psychology
The University of Arizona (Tucson, Arizona)

Research

Selected publications

鈥淣avigating Skepticism: Cognitive Insights and Bayesian Rationality in Pinillos鈥 Why We Doubt鈥, with Chad Gonnerman (2024) in International Journal for the Study of Skepticism

鈥淓xpert Testimony & Practical Interests鈥 with Nicholas Tebben (2022) in Inquiry, https://doi.org/10.1080/0020174X.2022.2041480

鈥淪alient Alternatives in Perspective鈥 with Mikkel Gerken, Joshua Alexander, and Chad Gonnerman, (2020) in Australasian Journal of Philosophy 98:4, 792-810.

鈥淚nfallibilism, Skepticism, & Cultural Differences鈥 with Karen Yan, Joshua Alexander, and Chad Gonnerman in Stephen Stich, Jason Stanley, & Masaharu Mizumoto (eds.), Epistemology for the Rest of the World (2018). New York: Oxford University Press.

鈥淔raming How We Think about Disagreement鈥 with Joshua Alexander, Chad Gonnerman, and Diana Betz (2018) in Philosophical Studies 175: 2539.

鈥淐ounterfeit Testimony: Lies, Trust, and the Exchange of Information鈥 with Nick Tebben (2016) in Philosophical Studies 173: 3101.

鈥淭he Market for Testimony: A Reply to Our Critics鈥 with Nick Tebben, in Social Epistemology Review and Reply Collective 4, no. 5 (2015): 43-51.

鈥淓pistemic Free-Riders and Reasons to Trust Testimony鈥 with Nick Tebben in Social Epistemology 29, no. 3 (2015): 270 - 279.

鈥淪alience and Epistemic Egocentrism鈥 with Joshua Alexander & Chad Gonnerman in James Beebe (ed.), New Directions in Experimental Epistemology (2014). London: Bloomsbury Press.

Research topics

Philosophy