In this paper, I will try to answer the question: How are we supposed to assess the expert’s opinion in an argument from the position of an outsider to the specialized field? by placing it in the larger context of the political status of epistemic authority. In order to do this I will first sketch the actual debate around the problem of expertise in a democracy and relate this to the issue of the status of science in society. Secondly, I will review how Douglas Walton’s pragma-dialectical approach offers a practical procedure to assess the expert bias from a nonprofessional’s perspective. Thirdly, I will introduce the problem of group bias using insights from Bohman and Fischer and show how Walton’s solution does not address this specific t...
This paper presents a unified response to the critics of my book Epistemic Democracy and Po-litical ...
Expert advice in political processes is supposed to improve decisions. If expertise fails in this fu...
Expert advice in political processes is supposed to improve decisions. If expertise fails in this fu...
In this paper, I will try to answer the question: How are we supposed to assess the expert’s opinion...
We live in an ‘expert culture’. By routine we rely on experts for many decisions, estimates, or choi...
The problem of the proper role of knowledge in political decision-making is a traditional and major ...
This paper discusses the conditions for legitimate expert arrangements within a democratic order and...
Epistemic democrats are rightly concerned with the quality of outcomes and judge democratic procedu...
Especially but not exclusively in the United States, there is a significant gulf between expert opin...
How can expertise best be integrated within democratic systems? And how can such systems best enable...
The phenomenon of expertise produces two problems for liberal democratic theory: the first is whethe...
This paper contributes to an on-going exchange in political theory on the normative legitimacy of ex...
In this paper I discuss some problems for epistemic democracy as it is presented and defended by Iva...
In this paper, I argue that expert disagreement can pose a deep problem for democracy. In order to f...
Expert advice in political processes is supposed to improve decisions. If expertise fails in this fu...
This paper presents a unified response to the critics of my book Epistemic Democracy and Po-litical ...
Expert advice in political processes is supposed to improve decisions. If expertise fails in this fu...
Expert advice in political processes is supposed to improve decisions. If expertise fails in this fu...
In this paper, I will try to answer the question: How are we supposed to assess the expert’s opinion...
We live in an ‘expert culture’. By routine we rely on experts for many decisions, estimates, or choi...
The problem of the proper role of knowledge in political decision-making is a traditional and major ...
This paper discusses the conditions for legitimate expert arrangements within a democratic order and...
Epistemic democrats are rightly concerned with the quality of outcomes and judge democratic procedu...
Especially but not exclusively in the United States, there is a significant gulf between expert opin...
How can expertise best be integrated within democratic systems? And how can such systems best enable...
The phenomenon of expertise produces two problems for liberal democratic theory: the first is whethe...
This paper contributes to an on-going exchange in political theory on the normative legitimacy of ex...
In this paper I discuss some problems for epistemic democracy as it is presented and defended by Iva...
In this paper, I argue that expert disagreement can pose a deep problem for democracy. In order to f...
Expert advice in political processes is supposed to improve decisions. If expertise fails in this fu...
This paper presents a unified response to the critics of my book Epistemic Democracy and Po-litical ...
Expert advice in political processes is supposed to improve decisions. If expertise fails in this fu...
Expert advice in political processes is supposed to improve decisions. If expertise fails in this fu...