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Moral perfectionism, non-causal action theory, and partial evidentialism with Megan Fritts
Episode 2

Moral perfectionism, non-causal action theory, and partial evidentialism with Megan Fritts

Particular Good · St. Bernard's School of Theology and Ministry

November 5, 20201h 6m

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Show Notes

Megan Fritts is a philosopher at Utah State University. In this episode, Megan talks with Charles about her work on moral perfectionism, non-causal action theory, and partial evidentialism. She addresses why beliefs are tricky, theory of knowledge is boring, and her husband is most likely not a serial killer—and how human lives are like chess pieces but not the ones spontaneously melting.