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eelhound · 3 years
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"Stupidity is a very specific cognitive failing. Crudely put, it occurs when you don’t have the right conceptual tools for the job. The result is an inability to make sense of what is happening and a resulting tendency to force phenomena into crude, distorting pigeonholes.
This is easiest to introduce with a tragic case. British high command during the First World War frequently understood trench warfare using concepts and strategies from the cavalry battles of their youth. As one of Field Marshal Douglas Haig’s subordinates later remarked, they thought of the trenches as ‘mobile operations at the halt’: ie, as fluid battle lines with the simple caveat that nothing in fact budged for years. Unsurprisingly, this did not serve them well in formulating a strategy: they were hampered, beyond the shortage of material resources, by a kind of ‘conceptual obsolescence’, a failure to update their cognitive tools to fit the task in hand.
Stupidity will often arise in cases like this, when an outdated conceptual framework is forced into service, mangling the user’s grip on some new phenomenon. It is important to distinguish this from mere error. We make mistakes for all kinds of reasons. Stupidity is rather one specific and stubborn cause of error. Historically, philosophers have worried a great deal about the irrationality of not taking the available means to my goals: Tom wants to get fit, yet his running shoes are quietly gathering dust. The stock solution to Tom’s quandary is simple willpower. Stupidity is very different from this. It is rather a lack of the necessary means, a lack of the necessary intellectual equipment. Combatting it will typically require not brute willpower but the construction of a new way of seeing our self and our world.
Such stupidity is perfectly compatible with intelligence: Haig was by any standard a smart man. Indeed, in at least some cases, intelligence actively abets stupidity by allowing pernicious rationalisation: when Harry Houdini, the great illusionist, took Arthur Conan Doyle, the inventor of Sherlock Holmes, through the tricks underlying the seances in which Conan Doyle devoutly believed, the author’s reaction was to concoct a ludicrously elaborate counter-explanation as to why it was precisely the true mediums who would appear to be frauds."
- Sacha Golob, from "Why some of the smartest people can be so very stupid." Psyche, 4 August 2021.
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tannertoctoo-blog · 7 years
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April 2, 2017
Australian Journal of Logic, Vol. 14, #1, 2017 Dissent, Vol. 64, #2, 2017 Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 141, #3, 2017 Journal of Medicine & Philosophy, Vol. 42, #2, 2017 Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek Political Thought, Vol. 34, #1, 2017 Mind, Vol. 126, #501, 2017 Nanoethics, Vol. 11, #1, 2017
Australian Journal of Logic, Vol. 14, #1, 2017 Special Issue: Non-Classicality: Logic, Mathematics, Philosophy. Editors: Zach Weber, Maarten McKubre-Jordens, and Patrick Girard Articles Jc Beall. There is no Logical Negation: True, False, Both, and Neither. Amanda Bryant. Resolving Quine's Confict: A Neo-Quinean View of the Rational Revisability of Logic. Guillermo Badia. A Remark on Maksimova's Variable Separation Property in Super-Bi-Intuitionistic Logics. Graham Priest. What If? The Exploration of an Idea. Suki Finn. Metametaphysics and Dialetheism. Shawn Standefer. Non-Classical Circular Definitions. Tore Fjetland Øgaard. Skolem Functions in Non-Classical Logics. Greg Restall. Fixed-Point Models for Theories of Properties and Classes. David Gilbert, Giorgio Venturi. Neighborhood Semantics for Logics of Unknown Truths and False Beliefs. Zach Weber, Maarten McKubre-Jordens. Paraconsistent Measurement of the Circle. Colin Caret. Hybridized Paracomplete and Paraconsistent Logics. Back to Top
Dissent, Vol. 64, #2, 2017 Editor's Page Michael Kazin. Trump and the F-Word. Culture Front Evan Malmgren. Don’t Feed the Trolls. Natasha Lewis. On the Dole with Ken Loach. Manisha Sinha. Slavery on Screen. Capitalism Today Mark Levinson, Timothy Shenk. Introduction: Toward a New Economy. J.W. Mason. A Cautious Case for Economic Nationalism. Michael Jacobs, Mariana Mazzucato. Breaking with Capitalist Orthodoxy. James K. Galbraith. Can Trump Deliver On Growth? Alyssa Battistoni. The False Promise of Universal Basic Income. Michael Ralph. The Price of Life: From Slavery to Corporate Life Insurance. Daniel Luban. The Elusive Karl Polanyi. Portfolio Grace Paley. This Is What We Must Do. Valérie Igounet, Vincent Jarousseau. Scenes from the Front: France’s Front National in Power. Repression and Resistance in Asia Jeffrey Wasserstrom. Repression and Resistance in Asia: Introduction. John Delury. The Candlelight Revolution. Vicente L. Rafael. Duterte Unbound. Alexis Dudden. Japan’s Antiwar Legacy. David Bandurski. An Umbrella Closes in Hong Kong. Jeffrey Wasserstrom. The Chairman of Everything. Tyrell Haberkorn. Court vs. Crown in Thailand. Articles Michael Walzer. The Historical Task of the Left. Nelson Lichtenstein. Who Killed Obamacare? Johanna Brenner, Nancy Fraser. What Is Progressive Neoliberalism?: A Debate. Joanne Barkan. The Miseducation of Betsy DeVos. Elizabeth Tandy Shermer. Party Crashers: How Far-Right Demagogues Took Over the GOP. Cole Stangler. The Red and the Rainbow: The Life and Work of Daniel Guérin. Andrew Elrod. What Happened to Workers’ Ed? Robert Jay Lifton. Malignant Normality. Reviews Patrick Blanchfield. Like the Weather. David Glenn. The Rise of Solitary. Abigail Fradkin. The False Economics of Anti-Immigration. Udi Greenberg. Against Conservative Internationalism. Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins. The Logic of Populism. Back to Top
Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 141, #3, 2017 Original Papers Mbaye Fall Diallo, Christine Lambey-Checchin. Consumers’ Perceptions of Retail Business Ethics and Loyalty to the Retailer: The Moderating Role of Social Discount Practices. Edward N. Gamble, Haley A. Beer. Spiritually Informed Not-for-profit Performance Measurement. Pandej Chintrakarn, Pornsit Jiraporn, Shenghui Tong. Exploring the Effect of Religious Piety on Corporate Governance: Evidence from Anti-takeover Defenses and Historical Religious Identification. Alan Reinstein, Eileen Z. Taylor. Fences as Controls to Reduce Accountants’ Rationalization. Laura Petitta, Tahira M. Probst, Claudio Barbaranelli. Safety Culture, Moral Disengagement, and Accident Underreporting. Sebastian Goebel, Barbara E. Weißenberger. The Relationship Between Informal Controls, Ethical Work Climates, and Organizational Performance. Daniela Andreini, Diego Rinallo, Giuseppe Pedeliento. Brands and Religion in the Secularized Marketplace and Workplace: Insights from the Case of an Italian Hospital Renamed After a Roman Catholic Pope. Jie Li, Gong Sun, Zhiming Cheng. The Influence of Political Skill on Salespersons’ Work Outcomes: A Resource Perspective. Malay Biswas. Are They Efficient in the Middle? Using Propensity Score Estimation for Modeling Middlemen in Indian Corporate Corruption. Tara J. Shawver, William F. Miller. Moral Intensity Revisited: Measuring the Benefit of Accounting Ethics Interventions. Sihai Li, Huiying Wu, Xianzhong Song. Principal–Principal Conflicts and Corporate Philanthropy: Evidence from Chinese Private Firms. Sadaat Ali Yawar, Stefan Seuring. Management of Social Issues in Supply Chains: A Literature Review Exploring Social Issues, Actions and Performance Outcomes. Back to Top
Journal of Medicine & Philosophy, Vol. 42, #2, 2017 Introduction Tyron Goldschmidt. Shifting the Focus While Conserving Commitments in Research Ethics. Articles David Wendler; Alan Wertheimer. Why is Coerced Consent Worse Than No Consent and Deceived Consent? David DeGrazia; Michelle Groman; Lisa M. Lee. Defining the Boundaries of a Right to Adequate Protection: A New Lens on Pediatric Research Ethics. Nicola Jane Williams. Harms to “Others” and the Selection Against Disability View. Joel K. Press; Caryn J. Rogers. Defining Research Risk in Standard of Care Trials: Lessons from SUPPORT. Miguel Ricou; Eduardo Sá; Rui Nunes. The Ethical Principles of the Portuguese Psychologists: A Universal Dimension. Lawrence Burns. What Does the Patient Say? Levinas and Medical Ethics. Back to Top
Polis: The Journal for Ancient Greek Political Thought, Vol. 34, #1, 2017 Research Articles Jan Maximilian Robitzsch. The Epicureans on Human Nature and its Social and Political Consequences. Ann Ward. Oedipus and Socrates on the Quest for Self-Knowledge. Andrea Catanzaro. From the Homeric Epic to Modern Political Theory. Bernard J. Dobski. The Enduring Necessity of Periclean Politics. V. Bradley Lewis. Eusebius of Caesarea’s Un-Platonic Platonic Political Theology. Adriel M. Trott. ‘Not Slavery, but Salvation’. Others Paul Christesen. The (Re)Birth of the Greek Economy? Ravi Sharma. Platonic Inquiry. Book Reviews P.L.P. Simpson. Aristotle’s Politics: A Critical Guide , written by Thornton Lockwood and Thanassis Samaras. Daniel Kapust. Livy’s Political Philosophy: Power and Personality in Early Rome , written by Ann Vasaly. Paula Gottlieb. Passions and Persuasion in Aristotle’s Rhetoric , written by Jamie Dow. Emily Austin. The Pleasures of Reason in Plato, Aristotle, and the Hellenistic Hedonists , written by James Warren. Jakub Jirsa. Politics in Socrates’ Alcibiades: A Philosophical Account of Plato’s Dialogue Alcibiades Major , written by Andre Archie. Wilfred E. Major. Aristophanes and Alcibiades: Echoes of Contemporary History in Athenian Comedy , written by Michael Vickers. Back to Top
Mind, Vol. 126, #501, 2017 Articles Edward Elliott. Ramsey without Ethical Neutrality: A New Representation Theorem. Hsueh Qu. Hume’s Doxastic Involuntarism. Daniel Greco. Cognitive Mobile Homes. Michael Cholbi. Paternalism and our Rational Powers. John Pittard; Alex Worsnip. Metanormative Contextualism and Normative Uncertainty. Leon Horsten; Graham E. Leigh. Truth is Simple. Discussions Chris Zarpentine. Moral Judgement, Agency and Affect: A Response to Gerrans and Kennett. Philip Gerrans; Jeanette Kennett. Mental Time Travel, Dynamic Evaluation, and Moral Agency. Book Reviews Michael Price. One: Being an Investigation into the Unity of Reality and of its Parts, including the Singular Object which is Nothingness, by Graham Priest. A. C. Paseau. The Laws of Belief: Ranking Theory & its Philosophical Applications, by Wolfgang Spohn. Sacha Golob. Kant's Transcendental Deduction, by Henry Allison. Karen Margrethe Nielsen. Levels of Argument: A Comparative Study of Plato’s Republic and Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, by Dominic Scott. Ivo Pezlar. Proof-Theoretic Semantics, by Nissim Francez. John Hyman. Strange Tools: Art and Human Nature, by Alva Nöe. Miriam Schleifer Mccormick. Judgment and Agency, by Ernest Sosa. Back to Top
Nanoethics, Vol. 11, #1, 2017 Special Section: Visioneering Socio-Technical Innovations Editorial Christopher Coenen. Visions Making Sense of the Present and Co-Creating the Future. Original Papers Simone Arnaldi. Changing Me Softly: Making Sense of Soft Regulation and Compliance in the Italian Nanotechnology Sector. Martin Sand, Christoph Schneider. Visioneering Socio-Technical Innovations — a Missing Piece of the Puzzle. Urte Brand, Arnim von Gleich. Guiding Orientation Processes as Possibility to Give Direction for System Innovations—the Use of Resilience and Sustainability in the Energy Transition. Sascha Dickel, Jan-Felix Schrape. The Logic of Digital Utopianism. Franziska Engels, Anna Verena Münch, Dagmar Simon. One Site—Multiple Visions: Visioneering Between Contrasting Actors’ Perspectives. Arianna Ferrari, Andreas Lösch. How Smart Grid Meets In Vitro Meat: on Visions as Socio-Epistemic Practices. Niklas Gudowsky, Mahshid Sotoudeh. Into Blue Skies—a Transdisciplinary Foresight and Co-creation Method for Adding Robustness to Visioneering. Sabine Pfeiffer. The Vision of “Industrie 4.0” in the Making—a Case of Future Told, Tamed, and Traded. Book Review Rosangela Barcaro. Ethical Assessment of Emerging Technologies. Appraising the Moral Plausibility of Technological Visions. Back to Top
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eelhound · 3 years
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"Stupidity has two features that make it particularly dangerous when compared with other vices. First, unlike character flaws, stupidity is primarily a property of groups or traditions, not individuals: after all, we get most of our concepts, our mental tools, from the society we are raised in. Suppose the problem with [Douglas] Haig had been laziness: there was no shortage of energetic generals to replace him. But if Haig worked himself to the bone within the intellectual prison of the 19th-century military tradition, then solving the difficulty becomes harder: you will need to introduce a new conceptual framework and establish a sense of identity and military pride for it. Once stupidity has taken hold of a group or society, it is thus particularly hard to eradicate – inventing, distributing and normalising new concepts is tough work.
Second, stupidity begets more stupidity due to a profound ambiguity in its nature. If stupidity is a matter of the wrong tools for the job, whether an action is stupid will depend on what the job is; just as a hammer is perfect for some tasks and wrong for others. Take politics, where stupidity is particularly catching: a stupid slogan chimes with a stupid voter, it mirrors the way they see the world. The result is that stupidity can, ironically, be extremely effective in the right environment: a kind of incapacity is in effect being selected for. It is vital to separate this point from familiar and condescending claims about how dumb or uneducated the ‘other side’ are: stupidity is compatible with high educational achievement, and it is more the property of a political culture than of the individuals in it, needing to be tackled at that level.
[Robert] Musil’s indulgent, almost patrician, attitude to ‘honourable’ dumbness [in 1937] was certainly dangerously complacent: consider its role in the anti-vax phenomenon. But dumbness alone is rarely the driving threat: at the head of almost every dumb movement, you will find the stupid in charge."
- Sacha Golob, from "Why some of the smartest people can be so very stupid." Psyche, 4 August 2021.
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tannertoctoo-blog · 7 years
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February 8, 2017
American Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 54, #1, 2017 European Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 24, #4, 2016 Journal of Applied Philosophy, Vol. 34, #2, 2017 Journal of Ethics, Vol. 21, #1, 2017 Journal of Political Philosophy, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 Mind, Vol. 126, #501, 2017 Mind & Language, Vol. 32, #1, 2017 Noûs, Vol. 51, #1, 2017 Philosophical Forum, Vol. 48, #1, 2017 Philosophical Studies, Vol. 174, #3, 2016 Ratio, Vol. 30, #1, 2017 Ratio Juris, Vol. 30, #1, 2017 Social Choice and Welfare, Vol. 48, #1, 2017
American Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 54, #1, 2017 Articles Executive Editor. Relevance Attenuation in Textual Scholarship. Vojislav Bozickovic. Slicing Thoughts. Leonhard Menges. Grounding Responsibility in Appropriate Blame. John Turri and Wesley Buckwalter. Descartes's Schism, Locke's Reunion: Completing the Pragmatic Turn in Epistemology. Peter V. Forrest. Are Thoughts Ever Experiences? Nir Fresco, Patrick McGivern, and Aditya Ghose. Information, Veridicality, and Inferential Knowledge. David Cornell. Mereological Nihilism and the Problem of Emergence. Neil Sinhababu. Divine Fine-Tuning vs. Electrons in Love. Back to Top
European Journal of Philosophy, Vol. 24, #4, 2016 Original Articles Jonny Thakkar. Moneymakers and Craftsmen: A Platonic Approach to Privatization. Franz Knappik. Hegel's Essentialism. Natural Kinds and the Metaphysics of Explanation in Hegel's Theory of ‘the Concept’. Jacob McNulty. Transcendental Philosophy and Intersubjectivity: Mutual Recognition as a Condition for the Possibility of Self-Consciousness in Sections 1–3 of Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right. Nate Zuckerman. Originary Temporality and Existential Commitment: A Defense of Heidegger's A Potiori Claim. Christian Skirke. Tugendhat's Idea of Truth. Steven Levine. Sellars and Nonconceptual Content. Saray Ayala. Speech affordances: A structural take on how much we can do with our words. Symposium: 50th Anniversary of P.F. Strawson's The Bounds of Sense Lucy Allais. Strawson and Transcendental Idealism. Quassim Cassam. Knowledge and its Objects: Revisiting the Bounds of Sense. Henry Allison. Transcendental Deduction and Transcendental Idealism. A. W. Moore. One World. Anil Gomes. Unity, Objectivity, and the Passivity of Experience. Book Reviews James Gledhill. The Political is Political: Conformity and the Illusion of Dissent in Contemporary Political Philosophy, by Lorna Finlayson. Jocelyn Benoist. The Objects of Thought by Tim Crane. Peter J. E. Kail. The Soul of Nietzsche's Beyond Good and Evil, by Maudemarie Clark and David Dudrick. Robert Watt. Berkeley's Argument for Idealism, by Samuel C. Rickless. Achim Vesper. Vernunft und Subjektivität. Frankfurter Vorlesungen, by Charles Larmore. Maciej Musiał. What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets, by Michael J. Sandel. Joshua Preiss. Cosmopolitan War, by Cécile Fabre. Back to Top
Journal of Applied Philosophy, Vol. 34, #2, 2017 Special Issue: Applied Epistemology Original Articles David Coady and Miranda Fricker. Introduction to Special Issue on Applied Epistemology. Stephen John. From Social Values to P-Values: The Social Epistemology of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Ian James Kidd and Havi Carel. Epistemic Injustice and Illness. Katharine Jenkins. Rape Myths and Domestic Abuse Myths as Hermeneutical Injustices. Ben Almassi. Toxic Funding? Conflicts of Interest and their Epistemological Significance. Georgi Gardiner. In Defence of Reasonable Doubt. Matthew J. Barker. Connecting Applied and Theoretical Bayesian Epistemology: Data Relevance, Pragmatics, and the Legal Case of Sally Clark. Tony Ward. Expert Testimony, Law and Epistemic Authority. Reviewed in this Issue Fei Song. Doing and Allowing Harm. Steven Tudor. Remorse, Penal Theory and Sentencing. Back to Top
Journal of Ethics, Vol. 21, #1, 2017 Original Papers Alan H. Goldman. Happiness is an Emotion. Hallvard Lillehammer. The Nature and Ethics of Indifference. Ishtiyaque Haji. The Obligation Dilemma. Caj Strandberg. A Puzzle About Reasons and Rationality. Andreas Brekke Carlsson. Blameworthiness as Deserved Guilt. Back to Top
Journal of Political Philosophy, Vol. 25, #1, 2017 Original Articles David Runciman. Political Theory and Real Politics in the Age of the Internet. Jacob Rowbottom. Government Speech and Public Opinion: Democracy by the Bootstraps. Andrew Mason. Appearance, Discrimination, and Reaction Qualifications. Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen. Affirmative Action, Historical Injustice, and the Concept of Beneficiaries. Kieran Oberman. Immigration, Citizenship, and Consent: What is Wrong with Permanent Alienage? Alan Strudler. What to Do with Corporate Wealth. Back to Top
Mind, Vol. 126, #501, 2017 Articles Edward Elliott. Ramsey without Ethical Neutrality: A New Representation Theorem. Hsueh Qu. Hume’s Doxastic Involuntarism. Daniel Greco. Cognitive Mobile Homes. Michael Cholbi. Paternalism and our Rational Powers. John Pittard; Alex Worsnip. Metanormative Contextualism and Normative Uncertainty. Leon Horsten; Graham E. Leigh. Truth is Simple. Discussions Chris Zarpentine. Moral Judgement, Agency and Affect: A Response to Gerrans and Kennett. Philip Gerrans; Jeanette Kennett. Mental Time Travel, Dynamic Evaluation, and Moral Agency. Book Reviews Michael Price. One: Being an Investigation into the Unity of Reality and of its Parts, including the Singular Object which is Nothingness, by Graham Priest. A. C. Paseau. The Laws of Belief: Ranking Theory & its Philosophical Applications, by Wolfgang Spohn. Sacha Golob. Kant's Transcendental Deduction, by Henry Allison. Karen Margrethe Nielsen. Levels of Argument: A Comparative Study of Plato’s Republic and Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, by Dominic Scott. Ivo Pezlar. Proof-Theoretic Semantics, by Nissim Francez. John Hyman. Strange Tools: Art and Human Nature, by Alva Nöe. Miriam Schleifer Mccormick. Judgment and Agency, by Ernest Sosa. Back to Top
Mind & Language, Vol. 32, #1, 2017 Original Articles E. J. Green. Attentive Visual Reference. Matthew Parrott. Subjective Misidentification and Thought Insertion. Frank Cabrera. Cladistic Parsimony, Historical Linguistics and Cultural Phylogenetics. Timothy Pritchard. Knowing the Meaning of a Word: Shared Psychological States and the Determination of Extensions. Back to Top
Noûs, Vol. 51, #1, 2017 Articles Michael Garnett. Agency and Inner Freedom. Daniel Rothschild and Seth Yalcin. On the Dynamics of Conversation. Allan Hazlett. Towards Social Accounts of Testimonial Asymmetries. Harjit Bhogal and Zee Perry. What the Humean Should Say About Entanglement. Eyal Tal and Juan Comesaña. Is Evidence of Evidence Evidence? Ron Mallon. Social Construction and Achieving Reference. Tamar Lando. Coincidence and Common Cause. Jeffrey Sanford Russell. Temporary Safety Hazards. Ori Simchen. Metasemantics and Singular Reference. Dale Dorsey. Idealization and the Heart of Subjectivism. Back to Top
Philosophical Forum, Vol. 48, #1, 2017 Original Articles Peter J. Riggs. The Perceptions and Experience of the “Passage” of Time. Tamar Levanon. William James in Search of the “Minimum of Dynamism” in Temporal Experience. Christopher D. Cordner. Justice and Unconditional Valuing in Nietzsche's genealogy. Necip Fikri Alican. Kant's Neglected Alternative: Neither Neglected nor An Alternative. Jim Slagle. Indicators and Depictors. Chung-Ying Cheng. From “Knowledge First” to Unifying Knowledge and Belief: In Light of Deeper Understanding of Mind and Reality. Notes on Contributors. Back to Top
Philosophical Studies, Vol. 174, #3, 2016 With Book Symposium on Steven Yablo's Aboutness Original Papers Jonathan L. Shaheen. The Causal Metaphor Account of Metaphysical Explanation. Jonas Waechter. Positive Truthmakers for Negative Truths: A Solution to Molnar’s Problem. Justin Donhauser. Invisible Disagreement: An Inverted Qualia Argument for Realism. Michael Hannon. A Solution to Knowledge's Threshold Problem. Ole Thomassen Hjortland. Anti-Exceptionalism about Logic. Aristidis Arageorgis. Relativism, Translation, and the Metaphysics of Realism. Bill Wringe. Rethinking Expressive Theories of Punishment: Why Denunciation is a Better Bet than Communication or Pure Expression. Jeff Speaks. A Puzzle about Demonstratives and Semantic Competence. Stephen Biggs, Jessica Wilson. The A Priority of Abduction. Kai F. Wehmeier. Identity and Quantification. Stephen Yablo. Precis of Aboutness. Zoltán Gendler Szabó. Finding the Question. Daniel Rothschild. Yablo's Semantic Machinery. Friederike Moltmann. Partial Content and Expressions of Part and Whole. Stephen Yablo. Replies to Commentors. Back to Top
Ratio, Vol. 30, #1, 2017 Original Articles Roberto Loss. Grounding, Contingency and Transitivity. John Gabriel. Particularism about Composition. Jeff Engelhardt. Mental Causation is Not Just Downward Causation. Kai Michael Büttner. Is There Such a Thing as Relative Analyticity? Nathaniel Sharadin. A Partial Defense of Permissivism. Vuko Andrić. Objective Consequentialism and the Rationales of ‘ “Ought” Implies “Can” '. Justin Tosi. The Possibility of a Fair Play Account of Legitimacy. Review John Preston. Conceptual Change and the Philosophy of Science: Alternative Interpretations of the A Priori – By David J. Stump. Back to Top
Ratio Juris, Vol. 30, #1, 2017 Articles Brian Z. Tamanaha. Necessary and Universal Truths about Law? Aleardo Zanghellini. Raz on Rights: Human Rights, Fundamental Rights, and Balancing. Mathias Risse. Responsibility and Global Justice. George Pavlakos. From a Pluralism of Grounds to Proto-Legal Relations: Accounting for the Grounds of Obligations of Justice. The Notebook Corner, edited by Enrico Pattaro Torben Spaak. Realism about the Nature of Law. Edoardo Fittipaldi and Elena Timoshina. Theory of Custom, Dogmatics of Custom, Policy of Custom: On the Threefold Approach of Polish-Russian Legal Realism. Back to Top
Social Choice and Welfare, Vol. 48, #1, 2017 Special Issue in honor of William Thomson; Issue Editors: Paolo Barelli, Youngsub Chun, John Duggan Editorial Paulo Barelli, Youngsub Chun, John Duggan. Introduction to the Special Issue in Honor of William Thomson. Original Papers Eun Jeong Heo, Vikram Manjunath. Implementation in Stochastic Dominance Nash Equilibria. Onur Kesten, Morimitsu Kurino, Alexander S. Nesterov. Efficient Lottery Design. Rodrigo A. Velez. Sharing an Increase of the Rent Family. Duygu Yengin. No-Envy and Egalitarian-Equivalence under Multi-Object-Demand for Heterogeneous Objects. Karol Flores-Szwagrzak. Efficient, Fair, and Strategy-Proof (Re)Allocation Under Network Constraints. Youngsub Chun, Boram Park. A Graph Theoretic Approach to the Slot Allocation Problem. Christopher P. Chambers, Juan D. Moreno-Ternero. Taxation and Poverty. Paula Jaramillo. Minimal Consistent Enlargements of the Immediate Acceptance Rule and the Top Trading Cycles Rule in School Choice. Pedro Calleja, Francesc Llerena. Rationality, Aggregate Monotonicity and Consistency in Cooperative Games: Some (Im)Possibility Results. Koichi Tadenuma, Yongsheng Xu. Distributions of Budget Sets: An Axiomatic Analysis. Laurence Kranich. Historical Discrimination and Optimal Remediation. Back to Top
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