The APA Blog is publishing excerpts from Cliff Sosis’s long-form interviews with philosophers, which appear at his blog, What Is It Like to Be a Philosopher? The excerpts below are...
...guide inscription. Lines and margins in turn create restrictions on writing—we feel compelled to stay within them to prevent ink from seeping out beyond the pages. Crucially, then, these tools...
...APA Blog is designed to share insights into the syllabi of philosophy educators. We include syllabi in their original, unedited format that showcase a wide variety of philosophy classes. We...
...faces at the border between regions. Insofar as the faces in the training data constitute a representative sample of the population the network will later be confronted with, and insofar...
Matthew J. Brown is the Jo Ann and Donald N. Boydston Professor of American Philosophy and the Director of the Center for Dewey Studies at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. His...
...common slogan aimed at this problem: “touch grass.” This is a blithe way of suggesting that we put down the screen and go outside. But despite its blitheness, the suggestion...
...meal to be? Anything with lentils. I think lentils are the perfect food. This section of the APA Blog is designed to get to know our fellow philosophers a little...
...the laws governing its pages. This is not that different from ancient and medieval philosophy, such as the timeless, changeless God of the Roman philosopher Boethius and the medieval friar...
...professorships in higher education and research institutions, even though they comprised 48% of PhD students, according to data gathered from a sample of 900 EU (European Union) and non-EU institutions....
...actions. Civic reciprocity without transparency is unaccountable: it is mute. Public spaces offer a step in correcting this. Two final notes: first, while this view shares many features with arguments...