TIMOTHY MCGREW is Professor of Philosophy at Western Michigan University, where
he specializes in epistemology, history and philosophy of science, and philosophy of
religion. His recent publications include Internalism and Epistemolgy
(with Lydia McGrew; Routledge, 2007), The Philosophy of Science: An Historical
Anthology (with Marc Alspector-Kelly and Fritz Allhoff; Blackwell, 2009),
"The Argument from Miracles" in William Lane Craig and J. P. Moreland, eds.,
The Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology (Blackwell, 2009), the
article on "Miracles" in the Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy
(2010), the article on "Evidence" in Sven Bernecker and Duncan Pritchard, eds.,
The Routledge Companion to Epistemology (Routledge, 2011), "The Reliability of
Witnesses and Testimony to the Miraculous," with Lydia McGrew, in Jake Chandler and
Victoria Harrison, eds., Probability in the Philosophy of Religion
(Oxford, 2012), and "The Argument from Silence," Acta Analytica 29 (2014).