Monthly Archives: October, 2021

APA Member Interview: Jeremiah Tillman

Jeremiah Tillman is a PhD candidate at the University of Maryland, College Park. Prior to Maryland, he studied philosophy at Bard College and The New...

Still Harming: Why the Trump-Era Title IX Regulations Need to Go

In August, the Chronicle of Higher Education published a defense of the Title IX regulations implemented by the Trump administration. The author, Tamara Rice...

Zooming Across Boundaries: Organizing a Reading Group during a Pandemic

A Philosophy PhD program is a long and difficult experience under normal conditions. If you add a pandemic on top of that, you have...

What attracts you to philosophy?

As part of our ongoing reader engagement project, the APA Blog would like to learn more about its readers and their interests. We view...

A Match Made in Law? On Corporations and Their Uncomfortable Fit with Democracy

Even though many people in the world live under democratic governments, they spend much of their lives under dictatorial rule. For about a third...

The Global Fight for the Humanities: Why a Liberal Arts College in Singapore Matters

Last month—in a move that shocked unsuspecting students, faculty, and alumnae—Yale-NUS College announced that the Singaporean liberal arts college founded just ten years ago...

Recently Published (Audio)Book Spotlight: Ethics in a Nutshell

Dr. Matt Deaton has hosted a comedy club, competitively boxed and kickboxed, and once survived an entire Christmas season without a single drop of...

APA Member Interview: Jeffrey Patrick Colgan

Jeffrey Patrick Colgan is an incoming PhD student at Tulane University and a current master’s student at the CUNY Graduate Center, whose philosophical interests...