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Myside Bias, Social Media, and the Malaise of Democratic Deliberation

...spirit. And this is happening at the same time that, as Scott Aiken and Robert Talisse pointed out in The Critique in 2017, “contemporary democracy is deliberative democracy [my emphasis].”...

Professors as Teachers

...concept of happiness, and academic ethics were interests I developed after having earned my doctoral degree. Decades later, when two of my former students, Professors Robert B. Talisse and Maureen...

Robert Talisse

Robert Talisse is W. Alton Jones Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University. He works centrally in political philosophy, with an emphasis in democratic theory. His latest book, which is forthcoming...

APA Member Interview: Harry Chalmers

...reading are Kevin Vallier’s Trust in a Polarized Age, Robert B. Talisse’s Overdoing Democracy, and Scott F. Aikin’s and Robert B. Talisse’s Political Argument in a Polarized Age. What’s your favorite...

Enjoy Eight New Books on White Privilege, Plotinus, and More

...Click on the links below to visit the virtual reading rooms. Books for November 2020 Political Argument in a Polarized Age, by Scott F. Aikin and Robert B. Talisse: From...

Contributors

To view a contributors bio, click Hsiang-Yun Chen Hsiang-Yun Chen is an assistant research fellow at The Institute of European and American Studies (IEAS) at Academia Sinica and works primarily...

Archive

Recently Published Book Spotlight: Overdoing Democracy

Robert Talisse This edition of the Recently Published Book Spotlight is about Robert Talisse’s book Overdoing Democracy. Robert Talisse is W. Alton Jones Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University. He...

New Books in Philosophy Podcast: Philosophy Outside Academia

...Carrie Figdor (University of Iowa) and Robert Talisse (Vanderbilt University) have been posting one episode each every month. The first episodes were posted in the summer of 2011, with interviews...

Philosophy and Pop Music

...be both quirkier and more confessional than other philosophy podcasts. I know Peter Adamson has several running jokes in The History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps, and Robert Talisse’s interviews...