6 August 2020
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Common Notions and Instincts as Sources of Moral Knowledge in Leibniz’s New Essays on Human Understanding -
The Science of Water -
Introduction: Common Notions. An Overview -
“Deus vult aliquas esse certas notitias…” – Epistemological Discussions in the Philosophy of the Early Modern Period -
The Scholastic Logic of Statistical Hypotheses – proprietates terminorum, consequentiae, necessitas moralis, and probabilitas -
Common Conceptions and the Metaphysics of Material Substance – Domingo de Soto, Kenelm Digby and Johannes de Raey -
Automatic for the People? Cybernetics and Left‐Accelerationism -
Memory production, vandalism, violence: Civil society and lessons from a short life of a monument to Stalin -
Reckoning With Kant on Race* -
The Institutionalization of Feminine Enlightenment in Tibet’s First Khenmo Program -
The Rights of Woman and the Equal Rights of Men -
Revisiting Enlightenment racial classification: time and the question of human diversity -
The art of trascegliere e notare in early modern Italian culture -
Renegades or liberals? Recent reflections on the Boasian legacies in American anthropology -
Impacts of trait anxiety on visual working memory, as a function of task demand and situational stress -
The ethics of COVID-19 tracking apps – challenges and voluntariness -
Uploaded -
Tallis in Wonderland: Philosophy in the Time of Plague, pt.2 -
Philosopher of the Heart [Kierkegaard] by Clare Carlisle -
Philosophy Then: Back to the Future -
The Existentialist’s Survival Guide by Gordon Marino -
Film: Crimes & Misdemeanors -
What Colour Are Numbers? -
Brief Lives: Iris Murdoch -
The Shock of Things to Come -
Interview: Graham Harman -
Question of the Month – How Do We Understand Each Other? -
Philosophical Haiku: Plotinus -
Robot Rules! -
Leo Tolstoy & the Silent Universe -
A Survival Guide for Living in the Simulation -
The Battle for the Robot Soul -
The Singularity of the Human Hive Mind -
Virtual Reality as a Catalyst for Thought -
The Meaning of Death -
Pascal’s Artificial Intelligence Wager -
Philosophical Misanthropy -
Neoliberalism & Social Control -
Unscrutable Morality – Could Anyone Know Every Moral Truth? -
Bending and Stretching the Definition of Lying -
The Non-Identity Problem and the Admissibility of Outlandish Thought Experiments in Applied Philosophy -
Michael E. Bratman, Planning, Time and Self-governance: Essays in Practical Rationality -
David Hitchcock, On Reasoning and Argument. Essays in Informal Logic and on Critical Thinking -
John Dunn Interview -
Political Parties as Corruption Hazards – The Republican Case for Sortition -
How to Craft Economic Policy – Values in Economics -
Democracy, Truth, and Epistemic Proceduralism -
The Epistemic Justification of Democracy -
Which Theory of Public Reason? – Epistemic Injustice and Public Reason -
Review of Salles, R.; Molina Ayala, J. Alejandro de Afrodisia. De la mixtura y el crecimiento (2019) -
The biblical age of judges without the letter ‘g’ -
If the body were a cetra, harmony would be his soul -
The Greatest Aporia in the Parmenides (133b-134e) and the Reciprocity of Pros Relations -
Covid-19 and education in Morocco as a potential model of concern for North Africa: a short commentary -
New Labels for Old Ideas: Predictive Processing and the Interpretation of Neural Signals -
Conscientious objection to abortion: why it should be a specified legal right for doctors in South Korea -
Not only laboratory to clinic: the translational work of William S. C. Copeman in rheumatology -
Body Boundary Work: Praxeological Thoughts on Personal Corporality -
The overlap problem -
Babylonian astronomy: a new understanding of column Φ -
Compliance to “Unpleasant” actions of crisis management: some remarks from a management control perspective -
The Epistemic Threat of Deepfakes -
Racism and Epistemologies of Ignorance: Framing the French Case -
What Makes a Kind an Art-kind? -
Human Flourishing, Liberal Theory, and the Arts -
The Whiteness of AI -
How should researchers cope with the ethical demands of discovering research misconduct? Going beyond reporting and whistleblowing - Number of publications for this day: 67
5 August 2020
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Counting to Infinity: Does Learning the Syntax of the Count List Predict Knowledge That Numbers Are Infinite? -
Profile of hospital transplant ethics committees in the Philippines -
Tactile Enumeration and Embodied Numerosity Among the Deaf -
Production of Inflected Novel Words in Older Adults With and Without Dementia -
SCEPTICAL DELIBERATIONS -
Justice, Migration & Mercy. Michael Blake, 2020, Oxford, Oxford University Press, ix+266 £22.99 (hb) -
Justice, Migration & Mercy. Michael Blake, 2020, Oxford, Oxford University Press, ix+266 £22.99 (hb) -
Givenness & Revelation. By Jean‐Luc Marion. Translated by Stephen E. Lewis. Pp. xviii, 137, Oxford University Press, 2016, £12.99. -
An ‘Argumentative Ally’: Collingwood’s Influence in MacIntyre’s After Virtue -
The Ancient Origins of Consciousness: How The Brain Created Experience. By Todd E. Feinberg and Jon M. Mallett. Pp. xx, 366. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 2016, $30.00/£25.00 (pbk.). Consciousness Demystified. By Todd E. Feinberg and Jon M. Mallett. Pp. ix, 199. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 2018, $24.95/£20.00 (hbk.). -
Mind: Your Consciousness Is What And Where? By Ted Honderich. Pp. 208. London, Reaktion Books, 2017, £16.00. -
A Natural History of Human Thinking. By Michael Tomasello. Pp. xi, 178, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, 2014, $19.95. -
Apocalypticism and Mysticism in Ancient Judaism and Early Christianity. Edited by John C. Collins, Pieter G. R. de Villiers, and Adela Yarbro Collins. Pp. 219, Berlin/Boston, De Gruyter, 2018, £79.00/$107.92. -
Making Progress in Housing: A Framework for Collaborative Research. By Sean McNelis. Pp. xxii, 266, NT/London, Routledge, 2014, £95.00. -
Aesthetic Revelation: Reading Ancient and Medieval Texts after Hans Urs von Balthasar. By Oleg V. Bychkov. Pp. xviii, 349, Washington, D. C. The Catholic University of America Press, 2010, $79.95. -
Auch eine Geschichte der Philosophie: Die okzidentale Konstellation von Glauben und Wissen (Vol. I); Vernünftige Freiheit. Spuren des Dirkuses über Glauben und Wissen (Vol. II). By Jürgen Habermas. 2 Vols. Pp. 1752, Frankfurt am Main, Suhrkamp, 2019, €98.00. -
Givenness & Revelation. By Jean‐Luc Marion. Translated by Stephen E. Lewis. Pp. xviii, 137, Oxford University Press, 2016, £12.99. -
From the Knowledge Argument to Mental Substance: Resurrecting the Mind. By Howard Robinson. Pp. xiv, 270. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2016, £19.99. -
The Philosophical Structure of Historical Explanation. By Paul A. Roth. Pp. xvi, 188, Evanston, IL, Northwestern University Press, 2020, $34.95. -
Miguel Escribano Cabeza, ‘Complejidad y dinámica en Leibniz. Un vitalismo ilustrado’, Comares, Granada 2017, 269 pp. -
Transhumanismo y neuroeducación en perspectiva orteguiana -
Vencer a la muerte. Crítica antropológica y teológica del proyecto transhumanista -
El transhumanismo a la luz de la antropología filosófica -
El transhumanismo o el fin de las esencias: el (bio)conservadurismo y su reminiscencia aristotélica -
Idealización, sublimación, normatividad. Una lectura psicoanalítica de la ‘Crítica del Juicio’ -
La memoria como ‘factum’ metafísico en la filosofía de la expresión de Giorgio Colli -
Nietzsche, la filología, y la filosofía: conjunciones en el horizonte de la crítica -
La ontología del mundo material de Tomás de Aquino según Jeffrey E. Brower -
Hegel y las inhibiciones lectoras de Heidegger. (Las desventuras de la diferencia en la lectura heideggeriana de Hegel) -
La elaboración de la noción de «estado de naturaleza pura» en el ‘Tractatus de gratia’ de Francisco Suárez. La perspectiva de André de Muralt -
¿Un transhumanismo nietzscheano? Sobre la parcialidad del alegato -
La reelaboración hegeliano-lacaniana del materialismo dialéctico según Slavoj Žižek -
El mundo ficcional: Fenomenología del mundo de fantasía