The epistemology of disagreement concerns the normative question of how you ought to revise your beliefs in a very specific epistemic context. Imagine that you and a peer form an opinion in isolation about whether P in response to mutually shared evidence, and you take your peer to be just as reliable as you about matters of this kind. How are you to respond should you subse-quently discover that your peer disagrees with you? Advocates of the Equal Weight view state that in light of known peer disagreement about whether P, you ought to revise your opinion in such a way as to “split the difference” between your own view and that of your peer’s.1 Let us call this the Equal Weight rule, or EWR. At another extreme, a Stay the Course view advoca...