Preparing Undergraduate, Graduate, and Post-Doc Philosophy Students for the Job Market.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Transferring Graduate Schools: Making It or Breaking It
Existentialism is the root of the Tea Party?
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
PGR 2011 is up!
Saturday, December 3, 2011
100 Reasons NOT to Go to Graduate School
Wittgenstein's archive rediscovered in Cambridge
A rediscovered archive could shed new light on the work of renowned philosopher, Ludwig Wittgenstein.
Professor Arthur Gibson, from the University of Cambridge, has been examining books and papers which disappeared from public view in 1941.
He believes that one of these could be the 'pink' or 'yellow' book Wittgenstein's pupils thought existed.
He said there was also a handwritten Brown Book which differs from the version that was published.
Friday, December 2, 2011
Grad School as a Game
Post-docs have to Pay for Application Fees (even though its a job)
Inside Higher Ed
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
CFP: Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy
We are pleased to inform you that the call for papers for the 2012 meeting of the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy has been posted.
(All of the following information is also available on our website: www.spep.org.)
Call for Papers for the 51st Annual SPEP Conference
51st Meeting of the
Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy
Thursday, November 1 — Saturday, November 3, 2012
Rochester Riverside Convention Center
Hyatt Regency Rochester
Rochester, NY
Host Institutions:
Rochester Institute of Technology
Nazareth College
The Executive Committee of SPEP invites:
COMPLETE PAPERS (no more than 3,000 words) with abstracts (75-100 words)
and
PANEL PROPOSALS consisting of one panel abstract (no more than 500 words) and complete papers (no more than 3,000 words per paper).
Papers and panels from diverse philosophical perspectives in all areas of Continental Philosophy are welcome.
All submissions will be considered under a blind review process.
PLEASE SEND ALL PAPER AND PANEL SUBMISSIONS DIRECTLY TO THE SECRETARY-TREASURER.
Instructions for Submissions
Submitting Paper and Panel Proposals:
1. A person may submit only one paper for consideration each year. If you have a book under consideration for a special session, you may still submit a paper for consideration.
2. All submissions must be submitted electronically. Please send your submission directly to the Secretary-Treasurer, Shannon Mussett, at mussettspep@gmail.com
3. Electronic Receipt Deadline: 11:59 p.m. EASTERN STANDARD TIME,
Wednesday, February 1, 2012.
4. The subject line of the email should read: 2012 SPEP Submission.
5. Your submission should contain TWO ATTACHMENTS:
1) Abstract AND Submission in one document prepared for blind review. Even if you are submitting a panel proposal, the panel abstract and all of the papers should be in one document. See “Format of Submissions” for more information.
2) A Cover letter that provides detailed contact information (including physical and electronic addresses) of the author(s), lists the word count of the paper(s), and indicates whether the author wishes to have the paper considered for “Best Submission by a Graduate Student” or “Best Submission by a Junior Scholar” (please be sure to indicate how you meet the eligibility requirements; for a full description and eligibility conditions of each prize, please see below under “Prizes”). In addition, if you anticipate the need for audio/visual equipment should your submission be accepted in the 2012 SPEP Conference program,please indicate exactly what you will need in your cover letter.
Format of Submissions:
All abstracts for single papers must include five key words. This will help the Executive Committee group single papers into panels when the conference program is being organized.
Single-paper submissions must include complete papers (of no more than 3,000 words exclusive of notes and references) and abstracts (of no more than 100 words).
Panel proposals must include a title, an abstract of no more than 500 words for the panel as a whole, and complete papers (no more than 3,000 words exclusive of notes and references) for each paper in the panel.
Since papers and panel proposals are chosen through an anonymous review process, names and addresses of authors must be stated only on one separate cover sheet and omitted from the abstracts, papers, and footnotes. The word count for papers should appear on the cover sheet; papers that exceed the 3,000 word limit will not be considered. Please use gender-inclusive language in accordance with the “Guidelines for Non-Sexist Use of Language” published by the APA and available at: http://www.apaonline.org/publications/texts/nonsexist.aspx.
Notification:
- Notification of receipt of your submission: Upon receipt of your submission, you will receive an automated electronic acknowledgement from the Secretary-Treasurer indicating she has received your email and its attachments. If you do not receive a response within one day, please send a follow up e-mail to ensure that your submission has been received.
- Notification of Inclusion in the 2012 SPEP Conference Program: Authors of single-paper submissions and the panel organizers of panel-submissions will hear from the Executive Committee by June 1, 2012 whether their submission has beenaccepted/rejected for inclusion in the 2012 SPEP Conference Program.
Prizes:
There are two monetary prizes available: the best submission by a junior scholar and thebest submission by a graduate student. To be eligible for the SPEP Junior Scholar Award you must have earned a Ph.D. in the last five years (no earlier than January of 2007). All currently enrolled graduate students are eligible for the SPEP Graduate Student Scholar Award.
Each monetary prize is $500.00 plus a travel and hotel allowance. In addition, two non-monetary honorable mention prizes will be awarded. All of the award-winning submissions will be selected through an anonymous review process. You must declare your desire to be considered for an award and your status as a graduate student or as a junior scholar on the cover sheet that accompanies your submission, which has been prepared for blind review. Winners will be notified by June 1, 2012.
Nominating Books for Current Research Sessions:
Postmark Deadline: Wednesday, February 1, 2012
In order for a book to be considered for a special session, a letter or email from the author to the Book Selection Committee Chair and to one of the Co-Directors requesting such consideration is required.
Send to:
Shannon Winnubst (Chair of SPEP Book Selection Committee)
100 Clinton Heights Avenue
Columbus, OH 43202
Eligible Books: Authors or publishers are encouraged to send two copies of monographs on topics of interest to continental philosophers, published on or after January 1, 2009.
Notification:
The Committee’s recommendations will be forwarded to the Executive Committee, and the authors of the books chosen for Current Research Sessions will be notified by June 1, 2012.
For further information, please contact either one of the Executive Co-Directors:
Anthony Steinbock
Department of Philosophy
Southern Illinois University
Carbondale, IL 62901
Amy R. Allen
Department of Philosophy
Dartmouth College
6035 Thornton Hall
Hanover, NH 03755
amy.r.allen@dartmouth.edu
SPEP Website: http://www.spep.org
Members of SPEP are also encouraged to submit their papers to the APA for consideration. Guidelines for submission can be found at:
Monday, November 28, 2011
Emerging Trends in Continental Philosophy,
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
2011.11.35 View this Review Online View Other NDPR Reviews
Todd May (ed.), Emerging Trends in Continental Philosophy, 252 pp., vol. 8 of Alan D. Schrift (ed.), The History of Continental Philosophy (8 vols.), University of Chicago Press, 2010, 2700pp., $800.00 (cloth), ISBN 978022670461.
Reviewed by Emanuela Bianchi, New York University
The eighth and final volume of Alan D. Schrift's monumental and immensely valuable series, The History of Continental Philosophy, attempts the almost impossible task of identifying and tracking the current continental philosophy scene, and specifically surveying developments over the last fifteen years. As with any historical project that begins to merge with present-day concerns, what is of lasting or canonical significance is difficult to discern as contours or identifiable movements of wave or backlash have not yet quite emerged. Accordingly, the volume is bound to frustrate any practicing philosopher who will inevitably find glaring lacunae in relation to his or her own partial and particular perspective -- for each of us involved in the philosophical enterprise (and especially the typically engagée continental philosophical enterprise) naturally finds our own areas of concern the most pressing, for why else would we work on them? It is a tricky task, then, to review a book that may in fact be of the greatest value to those approaching the discipline from the outside, whether as students or as scholars in other disciplines, from within continental philosophy. Nonetheless, in its breadth, and in the mostly astute strategies of the authors faced with this almost impossible task, the volume covers a great deal of important ground for anyone who wishes to discern in broad brushstrokes the multiple facets of continental philosophy today.
Join me on Twitter or Facebook for updates. Please email suggestions, links and questions to PhilosoraptErs@gmail.comTuesday, November 22, 2011
Philosophy Events Website!!!!
Yet another new project from the PhilPapers team: PhilEvents, a website devoted to upcoming events in philosophy. PhilEvents has a database of hundreds of forthcoming events. You can search it in many different ways: by subject, by location, and by various combinations of subject, location, and so on. You can use this to set up RSS feeds for searches on subjects and locations of interest.
Sunday, November 20, 2011
A Petition to the White House to Reinstate the Tax-Exemept Status of Grad Student Stipends
From Leiter:
Reader Jeffrey Lee McMahan calls my attention to this petition, which readers should consider signing.
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Ethics of Philosophy Qusetion
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Plato, Not Prozac!
Plato, Not Prozac!: Applying Eternal Wisdom to Everyday Problems.
I thought this sounded interesting although I haven't read it myself.
Gone is the need for expensive therapists, medication, and lengthy analysis. Clearly organized by common problems to help you tailor Dr. Lou Marinoff's advice to your own needs, this is an intelligent, effective, and persuasive prescription for self-healing therapy that is giving psychotherapy a run for its money."
Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP) at University of Oregon 2013
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Fake Job Searches
Friday, October 28, 2011
Philosophical Gourmet Report 2011: Large Changes in Department Rankings
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
The Problems of Law School
WITH apologies to show business, there’s no business like the business of law school.
Peter and Maria Hoey
Multimedia
Law School Tuition Soars
The basic rules of a market economy — even golden oldies, like a link between supply and demand — just don’t apply.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Applying to Jobs More Than Once
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
humorous cartoon
Monday, October 17, 2011
Video: What is philosophy's place in modern life?
Question: What is philosophy's place in modern life?
Michael Sandel
Thursday, October 13, 2011
Jobs For Philosophers now up
Join me on Twitter or Facebook for updates. Please email suggestions, links and questions to PhilosoraptErs@gmail.com194 ads, which is substantially better than last year's 157. There are another 48 web-onlies.In October of '09, there were 140 in the print version; in October '08, there were 267; in '07, we had 347.
The History of Continental Philosophy review
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
2011.10.10 View this Review Online View Other NDPR Reviews
Thomas Nenon (ed.), Kant, Kantianism, and Idealism: The Origins of Continental Philosophy
Reviewed by J. M. Fritzman, Lewis & Clark College
This is the first of eight volumes in the series The History of Continental Philosophy. In his introductory chapter, Thomas Nenon notes that, in contrast to analytic philosophy, continental philosophy developed through a deep and sustained dialogue with Kant's philosophy and those thinkers influenced by it in France and Germany during the nineteenth century. He is correct; Kant's philosophy begins its rehabilitation in analytic philosophy with the 1966 publications of Jonathan Bennett's Kant's Analytic and Peter Strawson's Bounds of Sense: An Essay on Kant's Critique of Pure Reason. He also observes that, although Kant's philosophy has now been appropriated by both analytic and continental philosophy, the other philosophers discussed in this book have generally been ignored in analytic philosophy.
Sunday, October 9, 2011
new job resource
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Article on Philosophy in Primary School (UK)
The following was found at TES:
A wise move
pedagogy | Published in TESpro on 30 September, 2011 | By: Michael Shaw
-
The idea of teaching philosophy to primary pupils can strike traditionalists as absurd. Surely children should be learning to hold a pencil, not debating whether or not the pencil actually exists?
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
21 Years of Philosophy for children in the UK:
The first class of Philosophy for children in the UK was held in Langbank Primary School, Scotland in October 1990. To mark the 21 years, our Patron, Catherine McCall and Langbank Primary school are hosting a Celebration that will bring together the original 5 year old children who pioneered 'p4c' in the UK (who are now 26 years old) with the current Langbank children doing philosophy in 2011. There will be videos and live demonstration with the children. The event will be hosted at Langbank Primary School on Friday October 14th from 1.30 - 3.30 p.m. For more details visit
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=219694758087364
What College Professors & Lecturers are Paid
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
58 Philosophy Jobs now at Phylo
Phylo Jobs is a free listing of job openings for academic philosophers. Listings are accepted from department or search committee chairs (or their authorized representatives) and verified for accuracy before appearing below.--
You can email Suggestions, Questions, and Links to PhilosraptErs@gmail.com
Monday, September 26, 2011
Lord Glasman: time to close half of UK universities?
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Phylo Jobs - New Philosophy Job list
How do Graduate Councils Work?
-- Thanks!Join me on Twitter or Facebook for updates. Please email suggestions, links and questions to PhilosoraptErs@gmail.com
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Philosophy in High school
Monday, September 19, 2011
PHD Comics
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Philosophy Comic Books
- So perhaps this is old news but I just found it. Evil Twin comics put out a bunch of comics on philosophy and while the accuracy is debatable, the enjoyment is free flowing. If comics are your thing, also check out Logicomix (about Russel), sadly Logicomix is not free.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Markkula Center for Applied Ethics News Letter
September 2011 Newsletter
Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University
Upcoming Events |
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
A Nice Article for Your Parents/Significant Other to Read
New Rationally Speaking podcast: Women in Skepticism
Monday, September 12, 2011
Tacit Accusations and Looking for Plagiarism
Thursday, September 8, 2011
New Book: Hubert Dreyfus and Sean Dorrance Kelly, "All Things Shining"
They open All Things Shining with a promise of no less than deliverance from the boredom, nihilism and despair that they think characteristic of our "secular age:"
anyone who is done with indecision and waiting, with expressionlessness and lostness and sadness and angst, and who is ready for whatever it is that comes next; anyone with hope instead of despair, or anyone with despair that they would like to leave behind, can find something worthwhile in the pages ahead. (xi)
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Philosophy Taught in Prison
--
Monday, September 5, 2011
Pluralist Guide: Even Handed Assesment
Preparing Academic Papers
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Ageism in Philosophy
--
Saturday, September 3, 2011
A Criticism of the Method of Scholarly Publication
Friday, September 2, 2011
Effectiveness of Track Programs: University of West Georgia
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Etymological Study Tool
Monday, August 29, 2011
100 Free Online Philosophy and Theology Courses
Philosopher's Canival (Aug 29, 2011)
Philosopher's Canival (Aug 29, 2011)
Young Philosopher: Writing a Book and Publishing articles
Friday, August 26, 2011
CFP: Brown University Graduate Philosophy Conference (Open Topic)
- The 6th Annual Shapiro Graduate Philosophy Conference Presented by the Philosophy Department at Brown University, Providence, RI Nov. 11th and 12th, 2011
- Keynote Speaker: Allan Gibbard (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)
- We invite papers of high quality in any area of philosophy. Applicants must submit papers electronically as .pdf, .doc, or .rtf files. Please submit as separate documents: 1. a cover sheet with author information, 2. an abstract without any author information (maximum 150 words), and 3. a paper without any author information (maximum 3,000 words)
- New submission deadline: September 1st, 2011 Please submit in blind review format, with all identifying information on the cover sheet only. Each page should be titled and numbered. Email submission address:
- For more information contact Phil or Brett at
Thursday, August 25, 2011
AAPT nominations for 2012-2014 Teaching Fellows
The American Association of Philosophy Teachers (AAPT) seeks devoted, excellent philosophy teachers to serve as 2012-2014 AAPT Teaching Fellows. Teaching Fellows will receive a small stipend ($500) and serve a two-year term August 15, 2012-August 14, 2014. Fellows will advance the teaching of philosophy. This may include mentoring newer teachers, blogging on the AAPT website, facilitating teaching and learning workshops, or other activities.Join me on Twitter or Facebook for updates. Please email suggestions, links and questions to PhilosoraptErs@gmail.com
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Effectiveness of track programs: University of Alabama
The pre-law concentration is one of many moves made on the department’s behalf when I was our chair and we were threatened with losing the right to offer a major in philosophy...
So we didn’t just save ourselves; we saved ourselves by adding to the ways in which we can do something valuable for the students at our university.....
I would recommend it to any department that has someone who finds the law interesting...
Thursday, August 18, 2011
The Importance of Thinking like a Colleague at Interviews
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Fast Web's Scholarship Search
CSU Long Beach: Growing Department?
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
"Philosophers' Carnival" Hosted on PhilosoraptErs
Philosophers' Carnival project, which aims to showcase the best philosophical posts from a wide range of weblogs. We invite submissions from bloggers and readers, and collate the submitted posts into one big round-up (or "carnival") every three weeks, offering a brief summary of each entry, and a link to the complete post.
Submissions Wanted:
We need submissions for posts to include in the carnival. Do you have a philosophy blog? If so, simply choose a favourite from among your recent posts, and use the BlogCarnival submissions form to submit the link.