Joe Salerno
From AcademicBlogs
Joe Salerno (Ph.D., The Ohio State University, 1999) is assistant professor of philosophy at St. Louis University. His areas of interest are formal and mainstream epistemology and the philosophy and history of logic. Recent Publications include:
New Essays on the Knowability Paradox (ed.), Oxford University Press, forthcoming. "Knowability Noir: 1945-1963" in Salerno J. (ed.), New Essays on the Knowability Paradox, Oxford University Press, forthcoming. "Church's Referee Reports on Fitch's 'A Definition of Value' " with J. Murzi (eds.) to appear in J. Salerno (ed.) New Essays on the Knowability Paradox , Oxford University Press, forthcoming. Knowability and Beyond (ed.), Special issue of Synthese. Projected publication date: 2008. "Truth-tracking and the Problem of Reflective Knowledge", to appear in J. Keim-Campbell and M. O'Rourke (eds.) Topics in Contemporary Philosophy Vol. 5: Knowledge and Skepticism, MIT Press, forthcoming. "Knowability, Possibility and Paradox" with B. Brogaard, to appear in V. Hendricks and D. Pritchard (eds.) New Waves in Epistemology, Ashgate Press. "Knowability and a Modal Closure Principle" with B. Brogaard, American Philosophical Quarterly, 43:3, 2006. "Anti-Realism, Theism and the Conditional Fallacy", with B. Brogaard, Noûs 39:1, 2005. "Clues to the Paradoxes of Knowability: Reply to Dummett and Tennant" with B. Brogaard, Analysis, 62:2, 2002. On Frege, Wadsworth Publishing Co., 2001.

