Neil Van Leeuwen
Featured Contributor
Neil Van Leeuwen is an empirically-oriented philosopher of mind at Georgia State University. He did his graduate work at Oxford University, where he studied classics, and at Stanford University, where he studied philosophy. Prior to his appointment at Georgia State, he held postdoctoral fellowships at Rutgers University and Tufts University. He has also taught at University of Johannesburg, where he has an ongoing appointment as Senior Fellow.
Articles
Is Facebook Morally Responsible?
21 August 2021
Unnecessary Necessities
28 May 2021
Is Meritocracy Possible? (A Solution)
16 April 2021
Is Meritocracy Possible? (Pt. I)
22 January 2021
When Do False Beliefs Exculpate? (Pt. I)
03 December 2020
Why We Argue About Fiction
02 November 2020
Why Do People Argue about Fiction?
09 September 2020
Kant on Lying to Robots, Part II
10 August 2020
Naïve Racism
17 June 2020
Puzzle 3: Kant on Lying to Robots
22 May 2020
Puzzle 2: What is an Identity?
16 April 2020
Puzzle 1: Are Beliefs Voluntary?
23 March 2020
Anti-Sacred Spaces
27 February 2020
Rough Humor
29 January 2020
Ken’s Unfinished Project
27 December 2019
A Puzzle About Sacred Values Part II
08 November 2019
Should We Trust Polls?
16 October 2019
A Puzzle About Sacred Values Part I
29 August 2019
A Simple Test for Fake News
25 July 2019
Does Thinking Help Stop Fake News?
21 June 2019
A Licentious Lannister?
03 June 2019
Working for Faith
12 May 2019
Controversy About Climate Denial
19 March 2019
Five Types of Climate Change Deniers
20 February 2019
Getting Clear on the Replication Crisis
22 January 2019