Abstract

In this final paper in the invited collection, Lorraine Code responds to panelists and provides background and reflections on her work.

Highlights

  • By way of background though not by way of dissembling, I have to note that it was difficult to find a publisher for Epistemic Responsibility in the late 1980s

  • They may have to do with the state of the discipline ; they may have to do with the sex of the putatively responsible knower?1 the book did earn gratifying respect from Ernest Sosa, Professor of Philosophy at Brown University, where it was awarded the Brown University Press First Book Prize, together with an invitation to teach for one semester at Brown

  • In addition to the pleasure of teaching social epistemology and being part of that department, I was able to affiliate with the Pembroke Center for Teaching and Research on Women: it was a fine opportunity

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Summary

Introduction

By way of background though not by way of dissembling, I have to note that it was difficult to find a publisher for Epistemic Responsibility in the late 1980s. Infuses everything: it is that I am so honoured by the very fact of this opportunity to respond; so moved by Anna Mudde’s orchestration of these readings and by her part in devoting an entire session to Epistemic Responsibility at CSWIP 2015, that—among other things—it affirms the wisdom of my refusal to expunge affect from the epistemological repertoire I enlist throughout my thinking and writing.

Results
Conclusion
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