Great title for an essay; read the whole thing here.
Author: Huenemann
Student philosophy papers
Here are five papers by USU undergraduates presented at this spring’s LPSC Colloquium. Feel free to post any replies/objections/comments/questions!
alexei-bastidas-sartre-and-marx1
daniel-tate-nietzsche-and-wagner1
jordan-daines-nietzsche-and-dostoevsky1
jeremiah-graves-conceptions-of-faith-kierkegaard-and-mormonism
Congratulations to these students (and others!) for presenting these papers!
Reinventing the sacred?
“My aim is to reinvent the sacred. I present a new view of a fully natural God and of the sacred, based on a new, emerging scientific worldview. This new worldview reaches further than science itself and invites a new view of God, the sacred, and ourselves—ultimately including our science, art, ethics, politics, and spirituality. My field of research, complexity theory, is leading toward the reintegration of science with the ancient Greek ideal of the good life, well lived. It is not some tortured interpretation of fundamentally lifeless facts that prompts me to say this; the science itself compels it.”
Full article here.
The future?
It’s the last week of classes (or so I hear). What are your summer plans? Any goals? Any goofy adventures? Any unbelievably boring prospects? I plan to be reading, writing, reading, writing Nietzsche — woo hoo!!! And riding my bike.
Again: the advantages of studying philosophy
“If I were to start again as an undergraduate, I would major in philosophy,” said Matthew Goldstein, the CUNY chancellor, who majored in mathematics and statistics. “I think that subject is really at the core of just about everything we do. If you study humanities or political systems or sciences in general, philosophy is really the mother ship from which all of these disciplines grow.”
