Skip to main content

Open for Debate

An Epistemic Environmentalist Analysis, From Twitter to X

An Epistemic Environmentalist Analysis, From Twitter to X

Posted on 13 October 2025 by ,

Epistemic Environmentalism Epistemologists are increasingly interested in epistemic environments. This marks a departure from a very specific case and agent-centred approach to epistemology, which dominated post-Gettier epistemology. The shift of […]

Toxic Positivity

Toxic Positivity

Posted on 22 September 2025 by

Optimism is generally thought to be desirable and useful and there is ample evidence that shows the benefits of optimism (see for example Gallagher, Lopez and Pressman 2013; Andersson 1996; […]

What does equity look like when we take a broader perspective of Open Science?

Posted on 4 August 2025 by ,

Figure 1 - A summary of the overall pillars of the UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science. In 2021, the 193 member states signed the UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science. In […]

In persuasion, ignore style at your peril

In persuasion, ignore style at your peril

Posted on 21 July 2025 by

Here's one way to try to persuade others: given them the evidence that convinced you. A simple recipe. Sometimes, it even works. Frequently, though, it fails. And this can be […]

Trust and the epistemic goods

Trust and the epistemic goods

Posted on 7 July 2025 by

Trust is immensely important to us: without it, as Annette Baier famously put it, many things we care about would be unsafe. Trust is also a mean to many ends […]

Conspiracy theories and their epistemology

Conspiracy theories and their epistemology

Posted on 23 June 2025 by

You may believe that on 20 July 1969, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed on the surface of the Moon aboard the Lunar Module Eagle. Or you might think […]

How distant can conspiracy theories be from democracy?

How distant can conspiracy theories be from democracy?

Posted on 9 June 2025 by

Imagine you are the leader of a democratic, liberal, prestigious, “old” party in a Western democracy of our time. We might bet that, if you held such a position, the […]

Intellectual Virtues Online – Part 2

Intellectual Virtues Online – Part 2

Posted on 26 May 2025 by

In my last entry, I praised the advantages of intellectual virtues in an online environment. This time, I briefly consider why too much of a focus on intellectual virtues might […]

Intellectual Virtues Online – Part 1

Intellectual Virtues Online – Part 1

Posted on 12 May 2025 by

For the second year in a row, the World Economic Forum has ranked misinformation and disinformation among the top global risks. And few places provide more opportunities for spreading misinformation […]

Digital Technology and Cognitive Scaffolding

Digital Technology and Cognitive Scaffolding

Posted on 28 April 2025 by

There is much ambivalence about digital technology. On the one hand, it makes many tasks much more efficient than they would otherwise be. We can do a quick internet search […]

A Careful Call for Humility

A Careful Call for Humility

Posted on 14 April 2025 by

Sit down. Be humble. – Kendrick Lamar, “Humble”   Humility is a virtue, right? Many people think so. Many think: we should be mindful of our limitations. We should take […]

Being pluralistic about philosophical pessimism (Part 2)

Being pluralistic about philosophical pessimism (Part 2)

Posted on 31 March 2025 by

In part one, I argued that the conceptual core of pessimism is the twin judgments that the human condition is very bad and likely to remain so. However, this does […]

Being pluralistic about philosophical pessimism (Part 1)

Being pluralistic about philosophical pessimism (Part 1)

Posted on 17 March 2025 by

There are many vernacular senses of pessimism. Familiar images of half-empty glasses go with elaborate talk of ours as ‘the worst possible world’. Pessimistic people might be praised as resolute […]

Samuel Alito and the Ethics of Suspicion

Samuel Alito and the Ethics of Suspicion

Posted on 3 March 2025 by

Justice Samuel Alito, of the United States Supreme Court, professes to be an “originalist” about the interpretation of the law. The originalist approach, roughly speaking, says that judges should adhere […]

An Existentialist Challenge to the Babel Fish

An Existentialist Challenge to the Babel Fish

Posted on 17 February 2025 by

Could advanced translation technologies solve linguistic injustice in the world? Activists and scholars hear this question being asked quite often, and sometimes with a slight skeptical tone suggesting the timing, […]

Data Figleaves: Statistics and their Power to Conceal Racism

Data Figleaves: Statistics and their Power to Conceal Racism

Posted on 3 February 2025 by

If you have followed the 2024 US election coverage, you have likely come across the term “migrant crime”. A term coined by Donald Trump to refer to an alleged crime […]

Terrorism and Evil

Terrorism and Evil

Posted on 20 January 2025 by

On 1 January of this year, an American man drove his pickup truck into a crowd on Bourbon Street in New Orleans (Louisiana, US). Fifteen people were killed and dozens […]

Oppressive Praise

Oppressive Praise

Posted on 6 January 2025 by

Think about the last time you expressed praise. For me this is easy. As a parent of young children, I do it multiple times a day. ‘How kind you are, […]

The “affective” in affective polarization

The “affective” in affective polarization

Posted on 23 December 2024 by

Public opinion in many contemporary democracies shows increasing signs of polarization. In particular, animosity and dislike across political lines have become increasingly characteristic of Western mass publics (Boxell et al., […]

Philosophical Foundations for Chatbot Regulation

Philosophical Foundations for Chatbot Regulation

Posted on 9 December 2024 by

In an age where we increasingly converse with artifacts - whose interfaces include AI, a pressing question emerges: Who, or what, are we really talking with? As AI-based chatbots, often […]