The book cover is out! This project consumed much of my brain for several years, and I learned a ton working on it.
@profcolin
Ethicist and historian of philosophy at the University of Washington. I have a new book about persuasion coming out in fall 2026: 'Just Hear Me Out: How to Change Minds without Lies, Bullshit, or Moral Compromise.'
The book cover is out! This project consumed much of my brain for several years, and I learned a ton working on it.
Thanks so much, Amy!!! (The official release is in Sept., but the Intro is on PhilArchive).
The APA's decision to cancel was procedurally questionable, at best. Hundreds of APA members petitioned in favor of the experiment, which was ended ahead of schedule. There was no survey or general discussion about the decision to cancel.
An eye-opening article from a friend of mine about the left / right divide. I found it really illuminating, especially in explaining some of the contempt between the two.
The final post in our series on why various philosophers support virtual conferences. This one is by the amazing Kino Zhao, and get to the heart one of the key questions I've wrestled with...
A really powerful story about persuasion, with great reflections about identity, kindness, compassion, and confrontation. Definitely worth ~20 minutes of your day.
I can't find an appropriate emoji for this. Maybe a mix between a barf face and an eye-roll?
That's great - congrats, David!!!
Fellow academics: Ever considered doing a Watch Party for a virtual conference? Last February, Mark Brennan organized an extremely successful watch party for undergrads at Northern Virginia Community College. I asked him how he pulled it off - here's his answer. blog.apaonline.org/2025/12/04/o...
A really nice post by Jenna Donohue on virtual conferences. She focuses on the American Philosophical Association's 2026 Pacific meeting, though her points generalize.
Are virtual conferences a good idea? A short, co-authored dialogue laying out some of the ethical issues:
How Jane Goodallβs Explanation for Persuading People Who Disagree With You Is Backed by Science
Beyond her many scientific contributions, she was also a model for how to communicate across differences.
www.inc.com/jessica-stil...
Thanks for the heads-up about this. I just deleted my academia[dot]edu account.
Very understandable, Samantha. Can I make a plug for the 2026 Pacific APA, though, which will be virtual? I agreed to be the Program Chair for it, in part, because the virtual format offers the only opportunity for some philosophers to network.
Philosophers: the 2026 Pacific APA has some new submission options. If you've got some early-stage projects, please consider submitting something for 'Workshop' or 'Lightning' sessions. We're trying out new ways of making the online APA meeting useful to as many people as possible.
Young Schopenhauer. Old Schopenhauer would have goaded his followers into doing it for him.
Thanks, Karl! And thanks for your awesome chapter.
American academics: is your university or department doing anything to improve its public image? We have a PR problem, but it seems like a fixable one: it's just a myth that we're brainwashing the youth with CRT or Marxism.
A provocative and thoughtful post by @joshdmay.bsky.social
Thanks, Neil! I reposted with (I think) a working link.
A short, co-authored piece with Emad Atiq, giving a metaethical response to recent criticisms of empathy from Musk and others.
"human stupidity, perversity, and depravity appear in every country in a different form... Disgusted with one, we praise another, until we become disgusted with that one too. - Every nation mocks the other, and all are right." -Schopenhauer
Academics: My university (UW) recently hatched a plan for widespread layoffs of department-level staff. The plan is both immoral and imprudent. But it's bringing faculty, staff, and students together in ways I've never seen before...
So sorry to hear this!
I'd warn any non-US academic friends against traveling here, sadly, especially if they've ever written or said anything critical about our current administration.
Congrats, Karl!
I was really impressed by Week 1. Lots of people who couldn't have attended an in-person conference got to connect and share their work. The APA tech support was also really good - the tech issues in my sessions were all resolved quickly.
We just need to read it with the right intonation, and then it all makes sense...
Philosophers: At least one thing in America doesn't suck. The Central APA (starting tomorrow) is looking really good. Lots of innovative sessions, a smooth online platform, and a bunch of great people involved. Please consider tuning in - several sessions are free and open to the public.