International Journal of Applied Philosophy

Volume 25, Issue 1, Spring 2011

Susan Feldman
Pages 15-24

Counterfact Conspiracy Theories

Cited by

  • KEITH RAYMOND HARRIS. Journal of the American Philosophical Association. Conspiracy Theories, Populism, and Epistemic Autonomy 2023. [CrossRef]
  • Ryan Ross. Synthese. When to dismiss conspiracy theories out of hand 2023. [CrossRef]
  • M R. X. Dentith. Synthese. Conspiracy theories on the basis of the evidence 2019. [CrossRef]
  • Keith Harris. Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement. What's Epistemically Wrong with Conspiracy Theorising? 2018. [CrossRef]
  • Simon Barker, Charlie Crerar, Trystan S. Goetze. Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement. Harms and Wrongs in Epistemic Practice 2018. [CrossRef]
  • Matthew R. X. Dentith. Social Epistemology. When Inferring to a Conspiracy might be the Best Explanation 2016. [CrossRef]
  • Nina Poth, Krzysztof Dolega. Philosophical Psychology. Bayesian belief protection: A study of belief in conspiracy theories 2023. [CrossRef]
  • M. Giulia Napolitano, Kevin Reuter. Erkenntnis. What is a Conspiracy Theory? 2023. [CrossRef]
  • Keith Raymond Harris. Synthese. Some problems with particularism 2022. [CrossRef]
  • Sebastian Dieguez, Pascal Wagner-Egger. L’irrationnel aujourd’hui 2021: 323. [CrossRef]
  • Winston Berg. Critical Review. Origins of the “Deep State” Trope 2023. [CrossRef]
  • M R. X. Dentith. Social Epistemology. Expertise and Conspiracy Theories 2018. [CrossRef]
  • Matthew Shields. Synthese. Rethinking conspiracy theories 2022. [CrossRef]
There may be additional citations on Google Scholar.