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    Globalization and the digital revolution are transforming human civilization in unprecedented ways, in large measure via innovation as well as imposition of emergent technologies on growing numbers of consumers. While these transformations confer undeniable benefits to humanity, the benefits are bundled with a corresponding set of detriments. This paper does not contest the benefits, but confronts the detriments. It appeals to humanities therapy as a remedy for many of the cognate problems exper…Read more
  • Exploitation in the Prisoner's Dilemma
    In Peter Danielson (ed.), Modeling rationality, morality, and evolution, Oxford University Press. pp. 7--161. 1998.
  • International Studies in the Philosophy of Science
    with Lars Bergstrom, John Forge, John Leslie, and Sami Pihlstrom
    International Studies in the Philosophy of Science: Isps 10 187. 1996.
  • Winning Habits (review)
    Philosophical Practice 5 (1): 600-602. 2010.
  • Synchronicity IIn the summer of 2006, I read several books by well-known existential psychiatrist and insightful novelist Irvin Yalom.2 They were all thought-provoking and mightily entertaining. Dr. Yalom sustains lively interests in philosophical aspects of psychiatry, as well as in psychiatric aspects of philosophy. Among other works, he has written two profoundly philosophical novels, namely The SchopenhauerCure and When Nietzsche Wept, in which he has delved deeply and creatively into the ps…Read more
  • Jody Azzouni, Metaphysical Myths, Mathematical Practice (review)
    Philosophy in Review 15 156-158. 1995.
  • Debate: Who Can Counsel?
    with Christian Perring
    The Philosophers’ Magazine. forthcoming.
  • Robert J. Geis, Personal Existence After Death (review)
    Philosophy in Review 16 396-397. 1996.