Mini-Heap


Recent additions to the Heap of Links…

  1. “We tend to misconstrue the nature of oppositions in philosophy” — Martin Lenz (Groningen) on how we can be misdirected by feelings of intellectual regret
  2. Games, agency, art, and real life — C. Thi Nguyen (Utah) in conversation with Carrie Figdor (Iowa)
  3. The virtues of intellectual dependability — they include intellectual benevolence, transparency, clarity, audience sensitivity, and intellectual guidance, says T. Ryan Byerly (Sheffield)
  4. A public philosophy dispute over pandemic policies — this links to the 4th installment in the debate between Ben Bramble (ANU) and Ian James Kidd (Nottingham) & Matthew Ratcliffe (York) – click your way back to the start
  5. “Metaphysics does not consist in construction but in investigation” — Alexander Douglas (St. Andrews) on Susan Stebbing and and the emergence of analytic philosophy
  6. A “fact-check” but for the arguments public figures use — a new series at PEA Soup
  7. Honor codes can serve as a moral reminder that helps “place our values front and center in our minds” — Christian Miller (Wake Forest) on the empirical evidence for an old-fashioned way of reducing student cheating

Mini-Heap posts usually appear when 7 or so new items accumulate in the Heap of Links, the ever-growing collection of items from around the web that may be of interest to philosophers. Discussion welcome.

The Heap of Links consists partly of suggestions from readers; if you find something online that you think would be of interest to the philosophical community, please send it in for consideration for the Heap. Thanks!

P.S. The Heap of Links page and the sidebar widget that lists new additions to the Heap are both still not working properly; the site is undergoing maintenance & repair in a part-time, piecemeal fashion, and they will eventually be fixed.

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