Abstract
Recent work on testimony has raised questions about the extent to which testimony is a
distinctively second-personal phenomenon and the possible epistemic significance of its
second-personal aspects. However, testimony, in the sense primarily investigated in
recent epistemology, is far from the only way in which we acquire knowledge from
others. My goal is to distinguish knowledge acquired from testimony (learning from
being told) from knowledge acquired from teaching (learning from being taught),
and to investigate the similarities and differences between the two with respect to the
interpersonal dimensions of their structures.