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Data Ethics, Zina B. Ward

...Kleinberg, Milo Phillips-Brown, Yoel Roth, and Catherine Stinson. I also keep a folder on my desktop where I save papers that I might want to assign in future iterations of...

Syllabus Showcase: Medieval Philosophy, Michael Wiitala

...use Meister Eckhard and Catherine of Siena as representatives of this response. Here is the syllabus: The Syllabus Showcase of the APA Blog is designed to share insights into the...

Rising Up and Living on with Catherine Walsh

Catherine E. Walsh’s Rising Up, Living On: Re-Existences, Sowings, and Decolonial Cracks (Duke UP, 2023) is, on the one hand, a report on the contemporary global situation through the lens...

Undergraduate Philosophy Club: Fordham University

The Fordham Philosophers’ Society, commonly known on campus as “PhilSoc,” began as a typical, yet uneventful undergraduate philosophy club. The association, originally founded in 2014, consisted of roundtable and book...

Syllabus Showcase: Introduction to Global Philosophy

...(on hope) and replacing it with some in-class exercises. And some of the texts are difficult: I think that next time I will (unfortunately) cut Catherine Elgin’s “True Enough,” and...

Caitlin Finch

Catherine Both is the Event Coordinator of the Fordham Philosophers’ Society, the Undergraduate Philosophy Club at Fordham University. Tweet...

Catherine Both

Cat Both is the Fordham Philosophers’ Society President and is majoring in English. Tweet...

Zeno’s Paradox Illustrated by an Impossible Dance

...it is true that Catherine will never reach Ed, it is equally true that Catherine cannot even begin to move toward Ed. Imagining that the dance floor consists of an...

Toward a Feminist View of Harm

...not intuitively recognize as harmful—in fact produce serious harms. In discussing gender-based oppression, for example, Catherine MacKinnon explains how “if [we] look neutrally on the reality of gender so produced,...

Entropy and Aging

...together lessons from the writings of Karl Marx and Catherine Malabou presents us with an intriguing answer: entropy. From the Greek entropḗ, where “en-” means “in,” and the root verb,...