Interested in Ethics Bowl?

For the last few years, USU has sponsored a team for Ethics Bowl. It’s like debate, but with less emphasis on “scoring points” than on providing a decent perspective on contemporary moral problems. (Well, in fact, that’s how you score points.) It’s a valuable, fun, and interesting experience. If you are interested, please contact Professor Holberg, or speak to any philosophy faculty member.

Frankenstein

The Common Literature Experience this year for incoming freshman and the community at large read Frankenstein.  Our own Prof Huenemann, along with Prof McCuskey from English, were the convocation speakers.  It was smart and funny and thoughtfully interwoven with the themes of Connections (the importance of a broad, liberal education, etc).

If you missed it, watch the video by clicking the link below (skip to 8:10 or so to get to Huenemann/McCuskey).

http://1560811.mediaspace.kaltura.com/media/2014.mp4/0_jyn011w8/21990082

 

 

Our stats are booming

This blog gets more visits than one might expect – it’s certainly not huge, but we probably have 30 or so visitors a day on average, and since we don’t post all that often, that surprises me. But I received a notice that we’ve had a recent spike in visitors, and indeed it is true – yesterday and today we’ve had about 60. Why? Well, most of these views have been of a page we published 5 years ago – entitled “Judith Jarvis on Abortion.” Aha! ‘Tis the season for writing papers for Intro to Ethics courses!

(My other blog, huenemanniac, also gets a steady stream of visitors who are either writing papers on Lon Fuller’s Morality of Law, or they are researching the Collier brothers. It’s strange what ends up being a steady attractor of attention!)

LPCS colloquium: Philosophy session

All are warmly invited to attend sessions of the undergraduate symposium sponsored by the Department of Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies. The full program is here:

LPCS symposium

And here is the Philosophy session:

5:15 – 6:15: “German philosophy and beyond
Room 207
Moderator: Harrison Kleiner

Alex Tarbet, “Schopenhauer’s Blues”

Alan (Gregory) Henderson, “Hegel and the Internet”

(and here’s the “beyond” part!)

Taylor Halvorson, “A visually determined Deutschland”