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7 COMMENTS

  1. I published ten articles with David Johnson at Al Jazeera America.

    Each piece went through multiple rounds of revisions akin to academic peer review. The essays are about 1000 words, have hyperlinks rather than endnotes, and lack certain academic pretensions (e.g. Greek words in parentheses). Otherwise, they are short academic articles.

    Many of my AJAM pieces were shared thousands of times and influenced the national conversation, in my case, about education. David is a tremendous editor and I hope that he can resume his mission of publishing public philosophy.

  2. Thank you for these supportive–and prudent–thoughts on how our discipline can continue to grow its public work. The Public Philosophy Network has held 4 conferences since 2011 and is a place for public philosophers to share strategies on doing effective public-facing work. On the model of public history, PPN has a wider understanding of public philosophy than writing philosophically on civic issues for general readers, though that is surely one of the most effective modes. Public philosophers might also do “fieldwork,” for instance–facilitating reflective conversations in community or professional groups. Or contribute to research and other collaborative initiatives by sharing expertise in formal epistemology, decision theory, or some other philosophical area. Though these efforts may not result in a journalistic product, they are also valuable but non-traditional ways of engaging with a public. And of course, they aren’t mutually exclusive, since hands-on direct work with communities is an excellent way to reach a deeper appreciation for how to effectively communicate the concepts and frameworks we come to take for granted inside the discipline. The next Public Philosophy Conference is (tentatively) scheduled to be held at Michigan State University in the fall of 2019.

  3. I think this is a terribly narrow view of public philosophy. It isn’t true that “public philosophy” has to address issues of “civic import” in any grand sense. It’s plenty if they address questions people are interested in.

    Tim Maudlin’s recent piece in the Boston Review on Quantum Mechanics was perfectly good public philosophy, and not because it was going to have any kind of impact comparable to Jodi Kantor’s work. If someone wrote a clear piece on the philosophical themes in a classic author, or on the epistemological issues involved in constructing a good baseball team, or on how ancient aesthetics influences, say, contemporary restaurant designs, those could be great public philosophy too.

    There is a common assumption that public philosophy means political philosophy, or at least (as in David Velleman’s piece) that anything worthy of being called public philosophy will have political implications. We should resist this; it’s a terribly narrow vision of what philosophy is, and of what the general public is interested in.

  4. To Brian,

    As I say in my piece, there are many different views of what public philosophy is and what’s interesting about it, and I think that’s good. I favor this pluralism.

    In this piece, I am advocating for a specific version of public philosophy that, I believe, would be worthwhile to promote and pursue. It doesn’t say that all public philosophy must address issues of civic import. It says that under this particular vision of public philosophy, that should be the goal. So of course it is a narrower vision. I don’t assume anything about public philosophy meaning political philosophy — I argue for the importance of this type of public philosophy (“philosophy in the public interest”) and I don’t make any claim about what the general reading public is interested in. “In the public interest” is not the same thing as “what the public is interested in.” That would be like saying that public interest journalism is journalism that the public is most interested in reading.

    So you can “resist” this vision of public philosophy, but I am not resisting your interest in pursuing other types of public philosophy.

  5. David Johnson offers a window in to his understanding of public philosophy with his description of public interest journalism…

    “Public-interest journalism uncovers or demonstrates facts that are vitally important to the public, but which have been relatively unknown or not properly grasped.”

    As I’ve been known to rant on every page where I can get away with it, I believe there is a topic which perfectly fits this description, our outdated “more is better” relationship with knowledge.

    1) Our relationship with knowledge will determine the fate of our civilization, and thus is reasonably declared vitally important. This claim involves no futuristic speculation, given that the “more is better” relationship with knowledge has already produced nuclear weapons which are capable of destroying modern civilization at any moment.

    2) After trying to engage scientists and philosophers on this topic largely without success for a decade, I am beyond firmly convinced that while this topic is not unknown, it’s importance is not close to being properly grasped.

    What’s most interesting about this article for me personally is that while I am in the process of largely giving up on scientists and philosophers, I realize now that I’ve never approached journalists on the subject, which is suddenly making me feel rather stupid indeed.

    So thanks to David for the humbling head’s up, and for providing me with new avenues to explore. If there is an interest, I would welcome any education regarding how to identify and reach out to the appropriate journalists.

    Good post! Could be a game changer here.

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