Kenneth Taylor
Host
Ken Taylor is the current Henry Waldgrave Stuart Professor of Philosophy at Stanford University. He is also director of Stanford's interdisciplinary program in Symbolic Systems. His work lies at the intersection of the philosophy of language and the philosophy of mind, with an occasional foray into the history of philosophy. He is the author of many books and articles, including Truth and Meaning, Reference and the Rational Mind, and Referring to the World.
Articles
Democracy and the Judiciary
09 February 2007
How Can Smart People Still Believe in God?
27 October 2006
Music, Meaning, and Emotion
18 September 2006
100 and Counting
28 August 2006
The Future of Philosophy
03 August 2006
Why I am not a Stoic!
25 July 2006
Odds and Ends
24 June 2006
What the Imagination is For
29 May 2006
Does Truth Matter?
03 April 2006
Legislating Values: A Reprise
30 January 2006
Science: The Big Kahuna
22 January 2006
God had a Technical Difficulty
20 December 2005
Why Believe (or Disbelieve) in God?
19 December 2005
The Dark Allure of Idealism
11 December 2005
Fiction and Imaginative Resistance
19 October 2005
The Language of Politics
19 September 2005
Saints, Heroes, and Schmucks Like Me
02 September 2005
Beyond the Cartesian Moment?
18 August 2005
Emotions, Judgments, and Mattering
26 July 2005
Greetings from Down Under!
14 July 2005
Improving the World vs Improving my Country
20 June 2005
Negotiating Identities: The Crash Solution
14 June 2005
Sex, Prostitution, and Well-lived Lives
16 May 2005