Public Philosophy

A Class Gotta Have A Code

There isn’t a University-wide Honor Code at my current institution, as there was at my previous one, and I realized the first semester after I moved that it was something I missed. So, I wrote one myself which I have students read and sign in the first week of classes. For what it’s worth, I…

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A Defense of Technology in the Classroom

I promised my friend and fellow blogger Samir Chopra that I would write something about the recent uptick in conversation about technology in the classroom, the overwhelming majority of which has been condemnatory. Full disclosure: I’m a big fan of technology (even in the classroom), I consider myself a cautious techno-optimist, and so I am…

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Chatbots and the Re-Ordering of the Polis

This past weekend, at the Society for Existentialism and Phenomenology conference, I heard a really fascinating panel dedicated to “The Promises of Polytheism” and I haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since. Now, as a rule, I’m not all that interested in theism(s) of the sort that most people would recognize, but I…

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Artificial Intelligence: As Soon As It Is, It Isn’t

For many years now, the term “artificial intelligence” has sat uncomfortably with me. What we call “artificial intelligence” today refers to any number of operations, performed by machines, that are normally attributed to human minds.. These operations are many and varied– calculating, planning, problem-solving, learning, natural language processing, reasoning, et al– and we generally collect…

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Why We Need YOUR Help to #SaveTheInternet

Did the image above give you a little bit of a dystopic shiver? It should. This Thursday, December 14, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai plans to roll back the Obama-era Title II regulations governing net neutrality. We can’t let that happen. You’ve no doubt heard the words “net neutrality” a lot in recent months (including on…

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Why I Invited Students To Give Me The Finger This Semester

Full disclosure: The title of this post is clickbait. I haven’t actually invited students to flip me the bird this semester. What I have done, however, is invite students to give me some kind of silent and subtle indication– we agreed on a flick of their pen or a slighttly-raised finger– whenever I use a word…

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Net Neutrality: America’s “Other” Health Crisis

It seems like everyone who is talking about net neutrality today worries that we’re not talking enough about net neutrality. They’re right. So, allow me to add mine to the choir of voices warning about Federal Communications Commission Chairman (and former Verizon lawyer) Ajit Pai‘s plan to dismantle the free and open flow of digital information…

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ISO Philosophical Moonshiners

What if academic Philosophy really invested in making itself understood to the general public? Over the last few years, I’ve seen the emergence of a number of initiatives aimed at cultivating what is now called “public philosophy.” The discipline of Philosophy’s largest professional organization constituted a committee dedicated to it (the APA Committee on Public Philosophy)….

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Six Powerful Men and One Busy Child: A Thought Experiment

In the first chapter of James Barrat‘s forebodingly entitled Our Final Invention: Artificial Intelligence and the End of the Human Era, he imagines what might happen once we cross the threshold from garden-variety artificial intelligences like we have today (i.e., self-driving cars, speech-recognition software, chess- and Go-playing machines) to artificial general intelligence (AGI), where machines could…

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Ten Things I Learned In My First Decade of Teaching

I only just recently realized that I’ll be completing my 10th year teaching in higher education at the end of this semester (not counting my time teaching or TA’ing in grad school). Whoa. In many ways, it feels like the last decade has flown by. There are days when I look out upon students’ faces…

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