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
Is Donald Trump Lying or Bullshitting?
05 December 2016
Stagehands in the Theatre of Life
21 June 2016
People with Guns
30 March 2016
Justice Scalia and Judicial Diversity
15 February 2016
The Divine Shape Shifter
14 January 2016
Two Concepts of Safe Space
17 December 2015
What is Cultural Appropriation?
27 October 2015
Mental “Disorder”: Do You Miss the Mountains?
23 March 2015
The Psychology of Climate Change Denial
08 February 2015
Categorizing Humans
12 January 2015
Intuitions Are a Guide to…Look Here!
02 November 2014
Theological Correctness Part II: An Answer
24 September 2014
Theological Correctness Part I: The Question
23 July 2014
Gods, Psychology, and Occam’s Razor
03 June 2014
Why Self-Deception Research Hasn’t Made Much Progress
01 September 2010
"Beautiful" and the Metaphysics of Beauty
13 August 2006
We’re All Crazy (Prelude to Tuesday’s show “Art and the Suspension of Disbelief”/follow-up to John’s most recent blog)
16 October 2005
Was Lance Armstrong Self-Deceived?
21 August 2005
Self-Deception and Moral Dilemmas
19 July 2005