Mini-Heap


Recent links…

  1. “Philosophical thinking will remain a source of human competitive advantage” — “philosophy is staging a royal comeback,” says The Economist. And from the same issue: “Why big AI labs are hiring so many philosophers
  2. A defense of Pyrrhonian skepticism about philosophy — from László Bernáth and János Tőzsér
  3. Missing shades: your screen cannot show you all of the colors you can see in the world. Here’s what you’re missing on your computer, phone, and tv, and why. — also: green traffic lights are not really green
  4. “For countless researchers worldwide, [access to academic research] is possible only thanks to [illegal] shadow libraries and anonymous sharing networks.” Does that make it ok to use them? — Lucas Miotto and Himani Bhakuni on the moral permissibility of sharing academic research illegally.
  5. “It is difficult to imagine how a modern economy would operate with Plato’s proposed constraints on wealth acquisition. But it is not hard for a modern reader to understand the concerns that led him to his radical proposal” — David Lay Williams on Plato on greed
  6. Trolley problem love song — by SNL’s Jane Wickline, with commentary from Colin Jost (from last year, but I just saw it)
  7. “They will seem wise when they may not be so” and they will “feel more confident” — two ancient problems that, Eric Schliesser says, connect to current discussions of AI and universities

Mini-Heap posts usually appear when several new items accumulate in the Heap of Links, a collection of items from around the web that may be of interest to philosophers. 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. Thank you.
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