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Diversity Reading List

Helping you include authors from under-represented groups in your teaching

The Language of Man

Posted on December 10, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This paper enumerates Irigaray’s main arguments and thoughts regarding the gendered nature of language and “the logos”.

Posted in Ethics and Socio-Politics of Language, Gender, Sex, and SexualityTagged gender, language, logic, psychoanalysisLeave a comment

Twelve Feminists and Philosophy

Posted on December 10, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This chapter reviews the book A Mind of One’s Own: Feminist Essays on Reason and Objectivity (1993), by Louise B. Antony and Charlotte Witt. The appeal to reason and objectivity amounts to a request that the observer refuses to be intimidated by habit, and look for cogent arguments based on evidence that has been carefully sifted for bias. In our own society the arguments of feminists make such appeals to reason and objectivity all the time, and in a manner that closely resembles Platonic arguments. And yet today reason and objectivity are on the defensive in some feminist circles. We are frequently told that reason and objectivity are norms created by “patriarchy,” and that to appeal to them is to succumb to the blandishments of the oppressor. We are told that systems of reasoning are systems of domination, and that to adopt the traditional one is thus to be co-opted. A Mind of One’s Own is a collection of essays by women who are prominent in philosophy today and who wish to confront recent feminist criticisms of philosophy. Most of the contributors are under fifty and widely respected; most grew up with strong political ties to feminism.

Posted in Logic and MathematicsTagged feminism, logic, reasonLeave a comment

Activist Epistemology

Posted on December 10, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

I propose a model on which epistemic frameworks are understood in terms of not only beliefs, but also sets of evidential support relations. We are generally responsive to multiple frameworks, some more compatible than others.The model allows for prioritizing certain frameworks by drawing on van Benthem and Pacuit’s work on logics for evidence-based belief. This prioritization allows us to capture the idea that some epistemic frameworks are “held come what may” with nuance and complexity.

Posted in Applied Epistemology, JusticeTagged activism, epistemic logic, neighborhood semantics, standpoint epistemologyLeave a comment

Circles of Reason: Some Feminist Reflections on Reason and Rationality

Posted on December 10, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Rationality and reason are topics so fraught for feminists that any useful reflection on them requires some prior exploration of the difficulties they have caused. One of those difficulties for feminists and, I suspect, for others in the margins of modernity, is the rhetoric of reason – the ways reason is bandied about as a qualification differentially bestowed on different types of person. Rhetorically, it functions in different ways depending on whether it is being denied or affirmed. In this paper, I want to explore these rhetorics of reason as they are considered in the work of two feminist philosophers. I shall draw on their work for some suggestions about how to think about rationality, and begin to use those suggestions to develop a constructive account that withstands the rhetorical temptations.

Posted in Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Metaethics, Theoretical EpistemologyTagged epistemology, feminism, Foucault, Fricker, Hume, reasonLeave a comment

Social Spheres: Logic, Ranking, and Subordination

Posted on December 10, 2023December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This paper uses logic – a formal language with models and a consequence relation – to think about the social and political topics of subordination and subordinative speech. I take subordination to be a matter of three things: i) ranking one person or a group of people below others, ii) depriving the lower-ranked of rights, and iii) permitting others to discriminate against them. Subordinative speech is speech – utterances in contexts – which subordinates. Section 1 introduces the topic of subordination using examples from the 1979 novel Kindred by Octavia Butler. Section 2 uses these examples to clarify and illustrate the definitions of subordination and subordinative speech. Sections 3 and 4 then develop a way of modeling subordination using a system of social spheres, an adaptation of (Lewis, 1973)’s approach to modeling the relation of comparative similarity on worlds for counterfactuals. Section 4 looks at three possible applications for this work: giving truth-conditions for social quantifiers, identifying fallacies involving such expressions, and explaining the pragmatics of subordinative speech. The last section anticipates objections and raises further questions.

Posted in Culture, Logic and Mathematics, Personal and Social IdentityTagged social quantifiers, subordination, subordinative speechLeave a comment

Methodological Reflections on the Study of Chinese Thought

Posted on October 27, 2023December 3, 2024 by Lea Cantor

Methodology has to do with systematic reflections on the methods adopted in a certain kind of activity, including that of intellectual inquiry. But we cannot talk intelligibly about the method of a certain kind of activity without knowing more about the nature of the activity as well as the goals and interests behind it. For example, we cannot talk intelligibly about the method of writing without knowing what it is that we write and for what purpose and audience, nor about the method of building a house without knowing what kind of house and for what purpose. This is no less true of intellectual inquiry, and in our case, the study of Chinese thought. We cannot talk intelligibly about the method of studying Chinese thought without knowing more about the goals and interests behind such study.

Posted in Historiography of Philosophy, Philosophical Media and MethodologyTagged Chinese philosophy, comparative philosophy, confucianism, metaphilosophy, Philosophical methodologyLeave a comment

Zhuangzi and the Obsession with Being Right

Posted on October 26, 2023December 3, 2024 by Lea Cantor

Since Zhuangzi laments the human obsesssion with being right, he would be highly amused at the scholarly obsession with being right on the meaning of his text, especially on the matter of whether he ultimately believed in a right versus wrong. The fact is that he invites our obsession by raising the question and then refusing to answer it. In chapter two, we are invited to take a stance above the debating Confucians and Mohists. What one shis 是 the other feis 非 (what is ‘right’ for one is ‘not right’ for the other); what one feis the other shis. Argument is powerless to declare a victor. Zhuangzi asks, “Are there really shi and fei, or really no shi and fei?”.

Posted in Theoretical EpistemologyTagged confucianism, Daoism, epistemology, knowledge, Mohism, scepticism, ZhuangziLeave a comment

Zhuangzi’s Knowing-How and Skepticism

Posted on October 26, 2023December 3, 2024 by Lea Cantor

A common interpretation of the Zhuangzi holds that the text is skeptical only about propositional knowledge and not practical knowledge. It is argued here that this interpretation is problematic, for two reasons. The first is that there is no motivation for Zhuangzi to criticize propositional knowledge, given some general pre-Qin epistemological assumptions. The second is that Zhuangzi explicitly criticizes a certain kind of practical knowledge. It is then explained how Zhuangzi’s skepticism can co-exist with the idea of “great knowledge.”

Posted in Theoretical EpistemologyTagged Daoism, epistemology, scepticism, ZhuangziLeave a comment

The Pursuit of Parmenidean Clarity

Posted on October 26, 2023December 3, 2024 by Lea Cantor

This paper reconsiders the debates around the interpretation of Parmenides’ Being, in order to draw out the preconceptions that lie behind such debates and to scrutinize the legitimacy of applying them to a text such as Parmenides’ poem. With a focus on the assumptions that have driven scholars to seek clarity within the notoriously ambiguous verse of the poem, I ask whether it is possible to develop an analysis of Parmenides’ Being that is sympathetic both to his clear interest in argument, logic, knowledge and truth and to his ambiguous expression and cultural and literary resonances.

Posted in Historiography of Philosophy, Philosophical Media and MethodologyTagged ambiguity, epistemology, Historiography of philosophy, metaphysics, ontology, Philosophical methodology, poetry, PresocraticsLeave a comment

Likeness and Likelihood in the Pre-Socratics and Plato

Posted on October 26, 2023December 3, 2024 by Lea Cantor

The Greek word eoikos can be translated in various ways. It can be used to describe similarity, plausibility or even suitability. This book explores the philosophical exploitation of its multiple meanings by three philosophers, Xenophanes, Parmenides and Plato. It offers new interpretations of the way that each employs the term to describe the status of his philosophy, tracing the development of this philosophical use of eoikos from the fallibilism of Xenophanes through the deceptive cosmology of Parmenides to Plato’s Timaeus. The central premise of the book is that, in reflecting on the eoikos status of their accounts, Xenophanes, Parmenides and Plato are manipulating the contexts and connotations of the term as it has been used by their predecessors. By focusing on this continuity in the development of the philosophical use of eoikos, the book serves to enhance our understanding of the epistemology and methodology of Xenophanes, Parmenides and Plato’s Timaeus.

Posted in Identity and Change, Ontology and Metaontology, Philosophical Media and MethodologyTagged epistemology, knowledge, Parmenides, Philosophical methodology, Plato, Presocratics, XenophanesLeave a comment

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