Duncan Pritchard has defended a version of epistemological disjunctivism which holds that in a paradigmatic case of perceptual knowledge, one knows that p in virtue of having the reflectively accessible reason that one sees that p. This view faces what is known as the basis problem: if seeing that p just is a way of knowing that p, then that one sees that p cannot constitute the rational basis in virtue of which one knows that p. To solve this problem, Pritchard has argued that seeing that p should be reduced to being in a good position to know that p rather than simply knowing that p. I argue that this proposal a) can only be properly understood if the concept of knowledge is taken as primitive, and b) is supported by an example that eithe...