I got a Google Wave invite last week. Now that I’ve played around with it for a bit, I’m sold. This thing is awesome. In this post, I’ll say a bit about what google wave is, and then I’ll briefly note a host of great things that philosophers (and other academics) will be able to [...]
Filed under: educational technology, research tools, teaching, the academy by Andrew Cullison
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My paper “What Are Seemings?” was just accepted for publication at Ratio! Here’s a link to the paper. I still have to make the style changes and add acknowledgements, but nothing of substance will be changed. Here’s the abstract. What Are Seemings? Abstract We are all familiar with the phenomenon of a proposition seeming true. [...]
Filed under: epistemology, papers, philosophy by Andrew Cullison
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Filed under: journal surveys by Andrew Cullison
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Filed under: journal surveys by Andrew Cullison
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Filed under: journal surveys by Andrew Cullison
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Filed under: journal surveys by Andrew Cullison
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Filed under: journal surveys by Andrew Cullison
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Filed under: journal surveys by Andrew Cullison
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UPDATE: The time is 5:30 (not 5) Josh May, a philosophy graduate student from UC-Santa Barbara, will be giving a talk at SUNY Fredonia this Monday called “What in the World is Weakness of Will?” This talk is sponsored by the Fredonia Philosophical Society. Here are the details. Title: “What in the World is Weakness [...]
Filed under: Uncategorized by Andrew Cullison
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A lot of philosophers might want server space, but don’t want to shell out the money. I’m talking about real server space where you can do anything you want without the sorts of restrictions and bandwidth limitations that universities might place on the free stuff they give you. There’s a lot of cool things you [...]
Filed under: educational technology, the academy, the profession by Andrew Cullison
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