Leiter Reports: A Philosophy Blog

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  1. Wynship W. Hillier, M.S.'s avatar

    I first met Professor Hoy when I returned to UC Santa Cruz in Fall of ’92 to finish my undergraduate…

  2. Justin Fisher's avatar

    To be worth using, a detector needs not only (A) not get very many false positives, but also (B) get…

  3. Mark's avatar

    Everything you say is true, but what is the alternative? I don’t think people are advocating a return to in-class…

  4. Deirdre Anne's avatar
  5. Keith Douglas's avatar

    Cyber security professional here -reliably determining when a computational artifact (file, etc.) was created is *hard*. This is sorta why…

  6. sahpa's avatar

    Agreed with the other commentator. It is extremely unlikely that Pangram’s success is due to its cheating by reading metadata.

  7. Deirdre Anne's avatar

“The Geography of Philosophy”

Edouard Machery (Pitt HPS), Clark Barrett (UCLA, anthropology), and Stephen Stich (Rutgers, Philosophy) write:

We are delighted to announce that the John Templeton Foundation has awarded us a 3-year (2018-21), $2.6 million grant for a project entitled “The Geography of Philosophy: An Interdisciplinary Cross-Cultural Exploration of Universality and Diversity in Fundamental Philosophical Concepts.”

Throughout the history of philosophy, many thinkers have urged that some fundamental philosophical concepts are universal–used by all people. Historians and anthropologists have often been skeptical of these claims. Recently, cultural psychologists and experimental philosophers have begun to explore empirically whether fundamental philosophical concepts are shared across cultures. Our multi-cultural, interdisciplinary project will involve over a hundred philosophers, psychologists, anthropologists, linguists, neuroscientists and economists in 10 regions around the world in order to determine whether, and to what extent, the concepts of knowledge, understanding and wisdom are shared across cultural groups.  

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