Rachel Etta Rudolph Department of Philosophy University of California, Berkeley sites.google.com/view/rachelettarudolph

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Rachel Etta Rudolph Department of Philosophy University of California, Berkeley rachelrudolph@berkeley.edu sites.google.com/view/rachelettarudolph Education Updated: November 2018 2019 University of California, Berkeley (expected) Ph.D., Philosophy 2017 University of Chicago (spring) Visiting Scholar (supervised by Chris Kennedy) 2011 McGill University B.A. (First Class Honours), Philosophy, with minor in German Areas of Research AOS AOC Philosophy of language, Metaethics Value theory, Epistemology, Philosophy of mind Dissertation Talking about Appearances: Experience, Evaluation, and Evidence in Discourse When we talk about appearances for instance, saying that a dress looks blue, or that a drink tastes sweet we seem to communicate both about the objective world and about our subjective experience. This comes out in two puzzling features of appearance claims. First, they generate faultless disagreement: cases where two speakers disagree, as if over an objective fact, and yet neither seems to be mistaken, given that each has a different perceptual experience of the subject matter. Second, they license the acquaintance inference: the inference that the speaker has firsthand acquaintance with the subject matter of the claim. I account for these two features through an expressivist analysis of experiential language, and argue that the analysis also illuminates the evaluative language of personal taste. Committee: John MacFarlane (co-chair), Seth Yalcin (co-chair), Line Mikkelsen (linguistics) Publications Refereed journal articles 2018 Talking about appearances: the roles of evaluation and experience in disagreement. Philosophical Studies. DOI: 10.1007/s11098-018-1185-5. Conference proceedings papers 2018 A closer look at the perceptual source in copy raising constructions. Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 23 (forthcoming).

2018 The acquaintance inference with seem-reports. Proceedings of the 54th meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society (forthcoming). Presentations Refereed The Relevance of Moral Language to the Metaphysics of Morals 2019 Central APA, Denver, CO (upcoming) Appearance Reports and the Acquaintance Inference 2019 Eastern APA (poster session), New York, NY (upcoming) 2018 Society for Exact Philosophy, University of Connecticut 2018 Berkeley-Stanford-Davis Graduate Conference, Stanford University A Closer Look at the Perceptual Source in Copy Raising Constructions 2018 Sinn und Bedeutung 23, Universitat Autònoma, Barcelona The Acquaintance Inference with Seems 2018 Society for Philosophy and Psychology, University of Michigan 2018 54th meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society (poster session), University of Chicago Subjective Language without Evaluation 2017 Subjectivity in Language and Thought Conference, University of Chicago Talking about Appearances 2017 Pacific APA, Seattle, WA Differences of Taste 2017 Central APA, Kansas City, MO 2016 Faces of Disagreement Conference, McGill University & Université de Montréal 2016 Berkeley-London Graduate Conference, University of London The Language of Appearance 2016 NASSLLI (poster session), Rutgers University Invited Searching for the Perceptual Source 2017 PhLing Workshop, Northwestern University Appearance Language & Relative Truth 2016 New York Philosophy of Language Workshop, NYU Moral Language and Moral Metaphysics 2016 Undergraduate Philosophy Forum Other presentations Is there a practical/theoretical puzzle in ethics? 2018 Richard Wollheim Society, Appearance Reports and the Acquaintance Inference 2017 California Universities Semantics and Pragmatics (CUSP) 10, UC Irvine 2

Searching for the Perceptual Source 2017 Philosophy and Linguistics Workshop, University of Chicago Talking about Appearances 2016 California Universities Semantics and Pragmatics (CUSP) 9, UC Santa Cruz The Language of Appearance 2016 Syntax and Semantics Circle, The Language of Appearance and Evaluation 2016 New Directions Fellowship Talk, How to be a Moral Antirealist 2015 Richard Wollheim Society, Comments Presupposing Counterfactuality, Julia Zakkou 2017 Philosophy Meets Linguistics Workshop, University of Zurich Non-Realism in Metanormativity, Disagreement, and Commitments to Universal Principles of Action, Carlos Núñez 2016 Berkeley-Stanford-Davis Graduate Conference, Thought Experiments, Misjudgments and Sufficiency, Alex Geddes 2015 Berkeley-London Graduate Conference, Other refereed conference participation Athena in Action, Session chair 2016 Workshop for Graduate Women in Philosophy, Princeton University Teaching Primary instructor () 2018 Individual Morality and Social Justice 2017 Introduction to Logic Graduate student instructor () 2019 Moral Questions of Data Science (upcoming) Niko Kolodny 2018 Formal Semantics (current) Amy Rose Deal 2017 Contemporary Ethical Issues Tim Crockett 2016 Theory of Meaning John Perry 2016 Introduction to Logic Seth Yalcin 2015 Introduction to Logic Paolo Mancosu 2014 Ancient Philosophy Klaus Corcilius 2014 Introduction to Logic Michael Rieppel 2014 Knowledge and its Limits Wes Holliday 2013 Ancient Philosophy Tim Clarke 2013 Nature of Mind Umrao Sethi 3

Tutor (Prison University Project, San Quentin, CA) 2018 Introduction to Philosophy (current) 2016 18 General College Writing 2017 Social Ethics 2016 Introduction to Philosophy Fellowships & Awards 2017 18 Doctoral Completion Fellowship 2016 NASSLLI Student Scholarship 2015 New Directions Fellowship competitive departmental funds for interdisciplinary research 2012 13 Ralph W. Church Fellowship 2007 10 Women Associates Centennial Entrance Scholarship 2009 10 James Darling McCall Scholarship 2008 09 Dow-Hickson Scholarship Coursework (*: audited) Philosophy 2018 Arguments from Illusion* Michael Martin 2018 Vagueness, Truth and Meaning* John MacFarlane 2017 Feminist Philosophy* Martha Nussbaum 2016 Nonfactual Thought and Discourse* Seth Yalcin 2015 Modalities of Discourse* Seth Yalcin 2013 Assessment Sensitivity* John MacFarlane 2013 Recent Work on Reasons and Normativity Jay Wallace 2013 Theory of Meaning John MacFarlane 2013 Aristotle on Animal and Human Agency Klaus Corcilius 2013 Descartes Tim Crockett 2013 Conditions of Thought Barry Stroud 2012 First-year Graduate Seminar Hannah Ginsborg and John MacFarlane 2012 Epistemic Logic and Epistemology Wes Holliday 2012 Uncovering Appearances Michael Martin Linguistics 2018 Formal Semantics Research Group* Amy Rose Deal 2015 Syntax and Semantics Line Mikkelsen 2015 Semantic Variation Amy Rose Deal 2014 Advanced Logical Semantics Ryan Bochnak 4

Pedagogy 2018 Reading Group on Inclusive Pedagogy* 2013 Philosophy Pedagogy Seminar Hannah Ginsborg Other 2017 Course in Human Research (Social and Behavioral) CITI Program Service & Outreach 2018 Organizer, Departmental First-Year Mentorship Program 2018 Project contributor, Minorities and Philosophy (MAP) Berkeley 2016 Volunteer tutor, Prison University Project (see Teaching ) 2017 18 Organizer, Berkeley Work-In-Progress Lunch Talks 2013 18 Referee, Berkeley-Stanford-Davis Graduate Conference 2017 Referee, Subjectivity in Language and Thought Conference 2016 17 Mentor, Departmental First-Year Mentorship Program 2015 16 Organizer, Berkeley Metaethics Reading Group 2012 16 Organizer, Berkeley-Stanford-Davis Graduate Conference 2013 14 Organizer, Departmental Colloquium Series 2012 13 Organizer, Richard Wollheim Graduate Presentation Society 2008 10 Editor, Philosophic Fragments, McGill Undergraduate Philosophy Journal Languages English (native), French (fluent), German (intermediate) Citizenship Canada, United States References John MacFarlane Professor of Philosophy jgm@berkeley.edu Chris Kennedy William H. Colvin Professor of Linguistics University of Chicago ck@uchicago.edu Paolo Mancosu (teaching reference) Slusser Professor of Philosophy mancosu@socrates.berkeley.edu Seth Yalcin Associate Professor of Philosophy yalcin@berkeley.edu R. Jay Wallace Judy Chandler Webb Distinguished Chair rjw@berkeley.edu 5

Talking about Appearances: Experience, Evaluation, and Evidence in Discourse Dissertation Abstract When we say that a dress looks blue, or that a musical instrument sounds off-key, or that a soup smells like it contains nutmeg, what do we communicate? With claims about appearances like these we seem to communicate both about the objective world and about our subjective experience. This comes out in two puzzling features of appearance claims. Faultless disagreement arises when speakers disagree, and yet neither seems to be mistaken. Speakers may faultlessly disagree about appearances, for instance if one holds that a dress looks blue, and the other that it doesn t. There is a felt incompatibility here, just as with disagreement over objective claims. But assuming the speakers have different visual experiences of the dress, neither seems to be mistaken. Which appearance claim a speaker correctly makes depends not just on the objective world, but on their subjective experience as well. Faultless disagreement thus precludes viewing appearance claims as straightforwardly objective or subjective. The acquaintance inference is the inference from an utterance to the conclusion that the speaker has relevant first-hand acquaintance. For instance, if a speaker says that the dress looks blue, one will infer that they have seen it. The utterance is infelicitous if they haven t. However, this inference is not an ordinary entailment. Again, this phenomenon precludes taking appearance claims to be straightforwardly objective or subjective. I defend an expressivist analysis of appearance claims, on which they are used to express speakers experiential states. On this view, faultless disagreement arises when speakers express incompatible experiential states, while nonetheless expressing experiential states they are in fact in. And the acquaintance inferences arises because when a speaker makes an appearance claim, one can infer that they are in an experiential state of the sort expressed by the utterance. My analysis covers not only appearance language, but experiential language more generally, which encompasses both appearance language and the evaluative language of personal taste (e.g. tasty, interesting ). Indeed, both faultless disagreement and the acquaintance inference have been associated primarily with evaluative vocabulary. I argue, however, that these features are not especially associated with evaluative language. The language of personal taste falls in the intersection of the evaluative and the experiential; but these puzzling features are due to experientiality. The investigation of appearance language is crucial for identifying the source of these features, for it includes claims that are experiential but not evaluative. Appearance discourse also offers insight into epistemic notions, like adequacy of evidence. This comes out in my investigation of the acquaintance inference with appearance claims, which examines behavior with no analogue in the more widely-discussed evaluative cases. Some appearance claims (e.g. Tom looks like he s cooking ) require acquaintance with a specific stimulus (Tom), while others (e.g. Tom looks like he s well organized ) just require acquaintance with something evidentially-relevant (like Tom s clutter-free office). Making use of experimental work, I argue that these two forms of acquaintance inference display our sensitivity, in discourse, to fine-grained evidential distinctions, for instance between transient properties (like cooking) and standing ones (like being well-organized). Appearance claims can thus serve to express our evidence. This integrates smoothly with the expressivist analysis I offer, as experience is a source of evidence about the world. Thus, in expressing experiential states, we can at the same time express our evidence. 6