Today we conclude our three part series devoted to Ben Bramble’s just published open access book Pandemic Ethics. A Revolutionary Argument: How and Why to Change Things Post-Pandemic Ben Bramble Here are some claims about what we should be doing during the pandemic: While the virus […] Read More

This is the second installment of a discussion of Ben Bramble’s recently published, open access book Pandemic Ethics. The third installment will drop on Friday. How Should Onlookers Live and Feel in the Pandemic? Ben Bramble COVID-19 has caused widespread hardship. Many people have become severely […] Read More

Today we start a three-part series on Ben Bramble’s just published open access book Pandemic Ethics. Part 1 (“Three Problems for Human Challenge Trials, and A Way Forward”) is below. Part 2 (“How Should Onlookers Live and Feel in the Pandemic?”) will get started here Wed. And […] Read More

Welcome to what promises to be an engaging discussion of Aidan McGlynn’s “Objects or Others? Epistemic Agency and the Primary Harm of Testimonial Injustice.” The paper was recently published in Ethical Theory and Moral Practice and may be found here. What follows is a critical […] Read More

Welcome to our highly anticipated discussion of Joe Horton‘s “Aggregation, Risk, and Reductio.” The paper is published in the most recent issue of Ethics; you can find it here. Johann Frick‘s critical précis is immediately below. Please join the discussion! Johann Frick writes: It is a great pleasure […] Read More

Welcome to the book forum for Thi Nguyen’s Games: Agency as Art! Below is a brief introduction to the book from Nguyen himself. Just a reminder: you do not need to have read the book to participate in the discussion. Feel free to ask about […] Read More

Next in our series of mentees interviewing mentors, this interview by Michael McKenna (Arizona) of Paul Russell (UBC/Lund/Gothenburg Responsibility Project). Guest appearances by C.A. Campbell, Jerry Cohen, and Bernard Williams. Russell talks about his life growing up amongst philosophers, life at Cambridge in one of […] Read More

This is the second of a two-part series of posts about different papers from a brand new book: An Introduction to Implicit Bias: Knowledge, Justice, and the Social Mind, edited by Erin Beeghly and Alex Madva. The post today is by Lacey Davidson and Nancy […] Read More

Today we start a two-part series of posts about different papers from a brand new book: An Introduction to Implicit Bias: Knowledge, Justice, and the Social Mind, edited by Erin Beeghly and Alex Madva. The posts will be by Rima Basu (today) and Lacey Davidson […] Read More