1. Subjective and Objective Confirmation
2. Knowledge as evidence
3. 2bandKnowledge and its Limits (Oxford UP, 2000 ), pp.184 -208 .
4. 3Maher recognizes that we do call inferred propositions evidence, which conflicts with his proposal. He himself uses an example in which the advance of the perihelion of Mercury is evidence. In effect he permits inferred knowledge to be regarded as evidence when it stands in for or replaces the non-inferential knowledge from which it was inferred (pp. 160-1).
5. 4Williamson, 'Knowledge as Evidence', pp. 20-1;Knowledge and its Limits, pp. 205-6.