Abstract
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>This volume of essays is about the possibility, nature, and scope of epistemic dilemmas—situations where every available option is epistemically unacceptable or unjustifiable from a rational perspective. Recently, epistemologists have become increasingly interested in whether there can be epistemic dilemmas, and, if there can, where and how they arise. The 17 essays in the volume push the discussion forward. They shed new light on many topics in epistemology, including the fundamental norms of belief, higher-order evidence, epistemic akrasia, moral encroachment, the relationship between the epistemic and the practical, paradoxes of self-reference, inquiry, and science communication, amongst others.</jats:p>