PHILOSOPHERS' CORNER
PHILOSOPHERS' CORNER
Neil Van Leeuwen
Featured Contributor
Neil Van Leeuwen is an empirically-oriented philosopher of mind at Georgia State University. He did his graduate work at Oxford University, where he studied classics, and at Stanford University, where he studied philosophy. Prior to his appointment at Georgia State, he held postdoctoral fellowships at Rutgers University and Tufts University. He has also taught at University of Johannesburg, where he has an ongoing appointment as Senior Fellow.
Articles
On Morally Condemning the Past
17 December 2018
How #MeToo Helps Men
23 October 2018
Do They Believe in God?
20 September 2018
Puzzle About Conspiracy Theorists (Part II)
06 September 2018
A Puzzle About Conspiracy Theorists (Part I)
10 August 2018
Who Is a “Criminal”?
06 July 2018
On Deepities and Bullshit
11 May 2018
The “Complicated” Causes of Gun Death (Part II)
20 April 2018
The “Complicated” Causes of Gun Death (Part I)
13 March 2018
The Temptation to Feel Baffled
16 February 2018
Stranger Feelings
31 January 2018
Lethal Speech
19 December 2017
Two Models of Hypocrisy
20 November 2017
To Retract or Not to Retract
24 October 2017
Is “Fascism” a Useful Word?
25 September 2017
Which Statues Should Go?
18 August 2017
Rumor, Suspicion, and Misinformation
28 July 2017
Pawns of ISIS
21 June 2017
Should Philosophers Get Political?
08 June 2017
Art, Origins, and the Fearless Girl
25 April 2017
Queer and Christian?
23 March 2017
The Philosophical Dimensions of Reparations
22 February 2017
Outrage or Pity?
18 January 2017
Time To Take Off The Tinfoil Hat!
12 January 2017
Empathy for Deplorables?
06 January 2017