The John R. Barrier Distinguished Teaching Award is given each year to a full-time faculty member in the humanities or social sciences divisions of Fairmount College. This peer recognition award acknowledges a professor whose teaching is outstanding, who has had an impact on the lives and career choices of students and who has the ability to enliven teaching and enrich the understanding of students. Congratulations, Dr. Lu!

AI generated photorealistic image of a pizza shaped like a mortarboard

A good time was had by all at the Philosophy Department pizza party and graduation celebration! Special congratulations to VC and CP, who have great plans in store after graduation.

Dr. Bondy smiling in a casual pose

Philosophers are people, too! Read about Dr. Bondy's musical side.

Dr. Hill, peering around a door with a big grin

Interested in free will, moral agency, and determinism?聽 Check out Dr. Hill's paper "Strawsonian Hard Determinism" in the Journal of Philosophy.

Dr. Castro in a trenchcoat and cap with a coffee cup, cartooned

As part of Newman University's Emerging Technology: Promises and Perils conference April 11-12, Dr. Castro will be speaking about "Medical Integrity, Algorithmic Intimacy, and Organoid AI". Register by April 4! This is a free event, supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.聽

Photo of Dr. Hill laughing, from behind a door

Philosophy has all the drama you could want: faith, fear, and death! 聽Coming soon in the journal Analysis: "Why People Who Believe in God Fear Death" by our own Dr. Scott Hill.

Photo of Dr. Castro laughing

On March 28 at 1pm in Lindquist 326, Dr. Castro will discuss philosophy of medicine and AI as part of the panel "History and Philosophy of Health".

Photo of Dr. Bondy

Dr. Bondy's new chapter "Informal Logic" forthcoming in Routledge Handbook of Argumentation Theory offers a concise overview of the informal logic movement.

Photo of Dr. Hill poised to speak

Dr. Hill's recent paper "Against Adoption-Based Objections to Procreation" concerns the moral permissibility of procreation in light of our duty to aid, the availability of adoption, poverty differentials, and climate change.

Photo of Dr. Bondy at work

Dr. Bondy's recent paper "Can Rational Persuasion Be Epistemically Paternalistic?" addresses the nature of epistemic paternalism (roughly, this is interference in other people's inquiry and deliberations, for the sake of their own epistemic good), and considers whether or not rational persuasion can be epistemically paternalistic.