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3 votes
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The Adventures of Fallacy Man
4 votes -
Post-politics and the future of the left
5 votes -
The legacy of Schopenhauer’s Metaphysics
3 votes -
G. E. Moore’s hands vs. radical scepticism (on the simulation hypothesis)
3 votes -
Winning an argument
5 votes -
Zombies (philosophy)
4 votes -
The Copernican Principle of Consciousness
3 votes -
Philosophy’s systemic racism
5 votes -
Judith Butler on the culture wars, JK Rowling and living in “anti-intellectual times”
5 votes -
The Buzz Aldrin fallacy
20 votes -
Is the University of Edinburgh right to rename its David Hume Tower?
9 votes -
The warped epistemology of conspiracy theories
6 votes -
Are illegal strikes justified?
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state...
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state employees from striking and GEO's contract with UofM (signed in April) has a clause that prohibits work stoppages.
Are strikes performed in violation of the law (state or otherwise) or a contract justified? Why or why not?
22 votes -
Kierkegaard on being happy again after you’ve lost everything
4 votes -
Think like a feminist
10 votes -
Ask Kim Kierkegaardashian: Worldly Goods vs. the Greater Good
2 votes -
Vulcan interests and moral status
7 votes -
Does it matter if we know the truth?
4 votes -
Are philosophical classics too difficult for students?
4 votes -
Theorizing racial capitalism
4 votes -
Speech acts
2 votes -
Toward a more expansive conception of philosophy
1 vote -
The hard problem of breakfast — How does it emerge from bacon and eggs?
3 votes -
Redefining “racism”: Against activist lexicography
8 votes -
Why we shouldn’t study what we love
7 votes -
How Camus and Sartre split up over the question of how to be free
4 votes -
The ethics of deep learning AI and the epistemic opacity dilemma
2 votes -
In praise of idleness
11 votes -
Horror and comedy: Screaming and laughing — two contrasting genres
3 votes -
Why does the right lie so often?
9 votes -
Catching sight of your self — Perception as the key to who we are
3 votes -
A neurophilosophy of autonomous weapons and warfare
2 votes -
What the problem of moral luck can teach us about lockdown rule-breakers
4 votes -
The philosophy of cricket
7 votes -
Nine books on philosophy and race
2 votes -
How does it feel living in a crypt? Impressions of one year later.
11 votes -
How compulsory unionization makes us more free
9 votes -
The meaning of death
4 votes -
A survival guide for living in the simulation
9 votes -
D&D and racism 4: Arguments
6 votes -
How do we diversify philosophy? Pluralism rather than inclusivism
6 votes -
Brett Wilson judges the case for laws for robots
1 vote -
Situating LessWrong in contemporary philosophy: An interview with Jon Livengood
3 votes -
Richard Rorty, cancel culture, political fallibilism, and achieving our country
5 votes -
Conservative arguments for inheritance reform
7 votes -
Cancel culture is the marketplace of ideas at work
16 votes -
Major videogame developer partners with philosophy department
4 votes -
What subjects related to humanities you would like to be discussed on Tildes?
I love humanities and philosophy in particular. I'm also a layman in both counts. Nevertheless, sometimes I wanna post some personal/informal essays on these subjects, but I have no idea if my...
I love humanities and philosophy in particular. I'm also a layman in both counts. Nevertheless, sometimes I wanna post some personal/informal essays on these subjects, but I have no idea if my fellow Tilderinos have any interest in those at all.
So here are as some subjects I have in mind, please tell if you're interested in of those or anything relatead:
- The Philosohy of Love
- Possibile World Semantics
- Philosophical zombies
- Albert Camus
- The Kyoto School
- The Paradox of Fiction
- The Paradox of Suspense
- Aristotle's Rhetoric
- Informal Logic
- John Austin
- Speech Acts
- Fallacies
The idea is not to make anything resemble a professional take of these subjects, but rather informal commentaries that might serve as starting points for interesting discussions.
Sadly, I don' have the knowledge or disposition to comment on subjects that are typically popular on Tildes, such as those more directedly related to computer science and artificial intelligence.
In terms of reference, I won't go much beyond the refereed links, which are reasonably exhaustive for the purposes of this project. The periodicity will be once every two months (counting starts tomorrow), with the first post that comes in next Septemper 16, 2020 (Monday). 60 days from now. Because of that, it wil be probably long form (no quarantees!).
This would come in addition to my project of going through each informal fallacies in the Illustrated Book of Bad Arguments, but I don't have any concrete plans for that now.
In any case, these things take time and effort, and I'll only then if and only if you guys and girls demonstrate interest. So please be vocal!
I'll choose the next subject of discussion base on public interest.
22 votes -
If the Louvre was on fire, should we rescue the art first or the people?
23 votes