Typically, expert judgments are regarded by laypeople as highly trustworthy. However, expert assertions that strike the layperson as obviously false or outrageous, seem to give one a perfect reason to dispute that this judgment manifests expertise. In this paper, I will defend four claims. First, I will deliver an argument in support of the preemption view on expert judgments according to which we should not rationally use our own domain-specific reasons in the face of expert testimony. Second, I will argue that the preemption view does not leave room for rejecting an expert judgment simply because it is outrageous. Third and finally, I will argue that outrageous expert judgments are ambiguous. Whereas some of them should be rationally reje...
In this paper I will contrast two views of expert testimony,an authoritarian view and a libertarian ...
In Daubert, the Supreme Court opined that opposing expert testimony is an effective safeguard agains...
Especially but not exclusively in the United States, there is a significant gulf between expert opin...
Typically, expert judgments are regarded by laypeople as highly trustworthy. However, expert asserti...
Under what conditions is it legitimate to accept some claim on the basis of authority—in particular,...
In this paper, I argue that many arguments from expert opinion are strong arguments. Therefore, in m...
In our highly complex world, we confront fields of knowledge in which we must depend upon others wit...
The dispute over whether litigants may use experts to run unexamined hearsay into the trial record i...
Abstract. While courts depend on expert opinions in reaching sound judgments, the role of the expert...
While courts depend on expert opinions in reaching sound judgments, the role of the expert witness i...
Judges and juries must make momentous and intricate decisions. The temptation is overwhelming for th...
Appraising the worth of others’ testimony is always complex; appraising the worth of expert testimon...
In a paper (Mizrahi 2013a) and a reply to critics (Mizrahi 2016a) published in Informal Logic, I arg...
Recent work on testimony and the norms of assertion considers cases of expert testimony. Thinking ab...
As appeals to expert authority shift from “fallacies” to “argument schemes,” argumentation theorists...
In this paper I will contrast two views of expert testimony,an authoritarian view and a libertarian ...
In Daubert, the Supreme Court opined that opposing expert testimony is an effective safeguard agains...
Especially but not exclusively in the United States, there is a significant gulf between expert opin...
Typically, expert judgments are regarded by laypeople as highly trustworthy. However, expert asserti...
Under what conditions is it legitimate to accept some claim on the basis of authority—in particular,...
In this paper, I argue that many arguments from expert opinion are strong arguments. Therefore, in m...
In our highly complex world, we confront fields of knowledge in which we must depend upon others wit...
The dispute over whether litigants may use experts to run unexamined hearsay into the trial record i...
Abstract. While courts depend on expert opinions in reaching sound judgments, the role of the expert...
While courts depend on expert opinions in reaching sound judgments, the role of the expert witness i...
Judges and juries must make momentous and intricate decisions. The temptation is overwhelming for th...
Appraising the worth of others’ testimony is always complex; appraising the worth of expert testimon...
In a paper (Mizrahi 2013a) and a reply to critics (Mizrahi 2016a) published in Informal Logic, I arg...
Recent work on testimony and the norms of assertion considers cases of expert testimony. Thinking ab...
As appeals to expert authority shift from “fallacies” to “argument schemes,” argumentation theorists...
In this paper I will contrast two views of expert testimony,an authoritarian view and a libertarian ...
In Daubert, the Supreme Court opined that opposing expert testimony is an effective safeguard agains...
Especially but not exclusively in the United States, there is a significant gulf between expert opin...