Leiter Reports: A Philosophy Blog

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  1. Mark Robert Taylor's avatar

    At the risk of self-advertising:… You claim “AI is unusual in degree, not in kind” and “It is not clear…

  2. F.E. Guerra-Pujol's avatar

    Apropos of Sagar’s wish to foist the A.I. industry by its own petard, this article appeared in print in yesterday’s…

  3. Claudio's avatar

    I teach both large courses, like Jurisprudence and Critical Legal Thinking (a.k.a Legal Argumentation), and small seminar-based courses at Edinburgh…

  4. Charles Pigden's avatar

    Surely there is an answer to the problem of AI cheating which averts the existential threat. . It’s not great,…

  5. Mark's avatar

    I’d like to pose a question. Let’s be pessimistic for the moment, and assume AI *does* destroy the university, at…

  6. A in the UK's avatar
  7. Jonathan Turner's avatar

    I agree with all of this. The threat is really that stark. The only solution is indeed in-class essay exams,…

“Nietzsche and Morality”…

will be published February 15 in Europe, and available a bit thereafter in the U.S.  The volume should be of interest not only to Nietzsche scholars, but to moral philosophers who, understandably, probably find much literature on Nietzsche unsatisfying.  All the newly commissioned essays here are by either moral philosophers with an interest in Nietzsche, or by philosophically sensitive and adept Nietzsche scholars.  The essays cover the major interpretive and philosophical issues related to his critique of morality, his positive ethics, his moral psychology, and his metaethics.  The essays are by Simon Blackburn (Cambridge); Maudemarie Clark & David Dudrick (Colgate); Thomas Hurka (Toronto); Nadeem Hussain (Stanford); Christopher Janaway (Southampton); Joshua Knobe (North Carolina) and Brian Leiter (Texas); Peter Poellner (Warwick); Bernard Reginster (Brown); Mathias Risse (Harvard); Neil Sinhababu (Texas); and R. Jay Wallace (Berkeley).

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