•  1
    As instructors, we frequently encounter students’ seeming inability or unwillingness to cite sources. Yet as academics, citing our sources is part of being members of a broader social and epistemic community; the scholarly work we produce indicates who among our epistemic community has contributed to our thinking about the discussion in which we are engaging. Part of the challenge in motivating students to engage in proper citation practices is that many of the ways we teach about citation pract…Read more
  •  22
    The Philosopher Queens (review)
    Essays in Philosophy 22 (1-2): 131-135. 2021.
  •  85
    Andrew Aberdein recently explored whether Aristotle held a (proto-)virtue argumentation theory, which would evaluate a good argument in terms of whether the arguers engaged virtuously. Aberdein admits, however, that connections between virtue, character, and argumentation are scarce within Aristotle's works. Accordingly, here Cassie Finley approaches this question from a different angle, comparing Aristotle's concepts of dialectic and rhetoric with virtue theories of argumentation. She argues th…Read more