•  26
    In Identifying future-proof science, Peter Vickers sets himself an ambitious goal. He wants to give us criteria, and parts of a method, for “identifying [scientific] claims we can be confident will last forever.”
  •  431
    The Ethics of Live Sound Technology
    Worship Musician Magazine. 2024.
    An analysis of the potential ethical implications of the use of live audio technology (pitch correction, immersive audio. etc.) through the lens of Nagasawa’s axiological expectation mismatch.
  •  475
    [ Selected abstract text only ] Can philosophy of religion enter the globalised, twenty-first-century world? If so, how? These questions arose from the Global-Critical Philosophy of Religion project and served as a springboard for Loewen and Rostalska as they present potential answers in this engaging and wide-reaching volume. Organised into two sections, ‘Critiques and Methods’ and ‘Case Studies’, contributing authors from across the globe (experts both within and outside philosophy of religion…Read more
  •  689
    Architecture, Acoustics, Auralization & Emotions
    with Alaa Algargoosh
    Live Sound International 5 (May): 16-19. 2024.
    An interview with Dr. Alaa Algargoosh, a research fellow at MIT Media Lab.
  •  822
    Should we fear a future in which the already tricky world of academic publishing is increasingly crowded out by super-intelligent artificial general intelligence (AGI) systems writing papers on phenomenology and ethics? What are the chances that AGI advances to a stage where a human philosophy instructor is similarly removed from the equation? If Jobst Landgrebe and Barry Smith are correct, we have nothing to fear.
  •  582
    Experimental philosophy (x-phi) is all the rage. But shouldn't all philosophy be experimental? Jeff Hawley looks at the views of three philosophers on the role and value of x-phi. This month’s PhilosophyNews 'WHiP: The Philosophers' focuses on a chapter from The Compact Compendium of Experimental Philosophy edited by A. Bauer and S. Kornmesser (forthcoming). 'All in the Family: The History and Philosophy of Experimental Philosophy' by Justin Sytsma, Joseph Ulatowski, and Chad Gonnerman digs into…Read more
  •  741
    Originally published in PhilosophyNews, July 19, 2022. This new series, What’s Happening in Philosophy (WHiP)-The Philosophers aims to provide a monthly snapshot of various trends and discussions happening across the discipline. In this inaugural post, we begin with a harrowing tale from David Edmonds involving the murder of the German philosopher Moritz Schlick. Schlick was a Vienna Circle guiding spirit and logical positivist thinker. Next up is Steven Nadler’s take on several biographies of …Read more
  •  864
    As the lyrics to the traditional nineteenth century gospel hymn state, one of the goals of many magical and religious practices is to experience ‘a closer walk with Thee,’ coming into the presence of the holy in both figurative and arguably literal terms. One of the many ways to improve this likelihood of achieving the deep and immersive presence of the holy—described by the scholar of comparative religion Rudolf Otto as the “gentle tide, [the] pervading [of] the mind with a tranquil mood” numin…Read more
  •  1111
    Presented at Philosophy Across Disciplines Conference 2021, Newcastle University. Submitted as masters capstone at Rutgers-Camden, 2023. As noted by philosopher Robert Pasnau, “our standard view of sound is incoherent” at best. A quick perusal of how we discuss and represent sound in our day-to-day language readily highlights a number of inconsistencies. Sound might be described roughly as emanating from the location of its material source (the ‘crack of the snare drum over there’ distal theory)…Read more