Happy Birthday Bertrand Russell!

Happy Birthday Bertrand Russell!

18 May is the birthday of philosophical legend Bertrand Russell. Bryan Pickel, lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, explains what any budding philosopher needs to know about Russell’s work.

Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) was a 20th-century philosopher, whose work covered virtually all areas of philosophy. He wrote prolifically on topics including the foundations of mathematics, the structure of language, the nature of thought, the status of science in society, and sexual ethics. His work is a starting point in many areas both within philosophy and in other disciplines such as linguistics. Russell was known for regularly changing his mind, often starting on one side of a debate but winding up on the other just a few years later. One of Russell’s most important contributions was his discovery of the paradox of classes, aka Russell’s paradox. Continue reading

Mark Sprevak: Thinking with Things

Mark Sprevak

It is common nowadays to say one’s memory is ‘on’ one’s smartphone. ‘Distributed cognition’ is an umbrella term for the idea that external objects, like smartphones, are more than mere inputs to our minds. They are, in some sense, part of our minds. It is hard to make this idea more precise. But the good news is that excellent work in philosophy has been done on this. Today, we are in a pretty good position. As one might expect, that position is complex: there are many – sometimes clashing – ways fleshing out the basic idea of distributed cognition.
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Aidan McGlynn: How Pornography Works: Pornography as Undermining Propaganda, and Freedom of Speech

Aidan McGlynn: How Pornography Works: Pornography as Undermining Propaganda, and Freedom of Speech

This month’s podcast comes from Dr Aidan McGlynn, who discusses a paper he recently presented called ‘How pornography works: Pornography as undermining propaganda.’ Aidan is a lecturer in philosophy in the school of PPLS and has worked on a wide range of philosophical topics.

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Andy Clark: Surfing Uncertainty: Prediction, Action and the Embodied Mind

Andy Clark: Surfing Uncertainty: Prediction, Action and the Embodied Mind

Have you ever suspected that people tend to see what they expect to see? If you have, then you might want to check out my new book Surfing Uncertainty: Prediction, Action, and the Embodied Mind. The book explores an emerging view of the perceiving brain as a prediction machine. Brains like that are not cognitive couch-potatoes, passively awaiting the next waves of sensory stimulation. Instead, they are pro-active prediction engines constantly trying to guess at, or anticipate, the shape of the incoming sensory signal.

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