...arguments in favor of this view. The book applies the reason-responsive consequentialist view to shed light on traditional questions about bounded rationality, emerging questions in the epistemology of inquiry, and...
...Exciting projects in the works? I’ve been collaborating with John Bengson and Terence Cuneo for a decade on a project that was supposed to be one book and has turned...
The mission of a college or university is to develop and transmit knowledge. Doing so effectively calls for maintaining an atmosphere of free inquiry in which no one dictates that...
...to be a part of this project. Please contact Editor of the Teaching Beat, Dr. Smrutipriya Pattnaik via smrutipriya23@gmail.com, or Series Editor, Cara S. Greene via cara.greene@coloradocollege.edu with potential submissions. Tweet...
Brian D. Earp is an incoming Associate Professor of Biomedical Ethics (and Philosophy, by courtesy) at the National University of Singapore, and is director of both the international Oxford-NUS Centre...
...be regarded as apt. Ultimately, then, it encourages us to feel that womanness is aptly striking-salient in the context of philosophy, something most easily made sense of by drawing on...
...and here I am, writing yet another reflection on imposter syndrome. Before, during, and following my first year of grad school, imposter syndrome may easily have been (and continues to...
...were more sophisticated, highly useful things, but just things. We marveled at how Siri and Alexa were able to play a song or search the web on command, but became...
...But which questions? Or: whose questions matter? As my Elon colleague, Stephen Bloch-Schulman, says, “philosophy teachers are very good at answering questions that students do not care about.” Rather than...
...be defined in strictly biological terms. The latter concept has informed legal statutes, such as the U.S. Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA), which allows for death to be declared...