Ray Briggs
Featured Contributor
Ray Briggs is a Professor of Philosophy at Stanford University. Their research explores how formal models can help us reason better about practical and theoretical matters; they are particularly interested in decision theory, measurement theory, and the philosophy of probability. In addition to over 20 philosophy articles, Ray has published two poetry collections and been nominated for a Pushcart.
Articles
Kant's Guide to Morality
22 April 2022
Tackling Sexual Violence
07 March 2022
The Value of Anger
11 February 2022
Digital Persons?
07 January 2022
A Question of Frege
08 November 2021
Persons, Community, and the Akan
25 October 2021
Why Is Math So Useful?
15 October 2021
The Slow Miracles of Thought
23 July 2021
The Philosophy of the Vienna Circle
22 May 2021
Cracking Down on Disinformation
14 May 2021
What Makes A Man?
19 March 2021
The Mathematics of Democracy
15 January 2021
Whose Fault Is It Anyway?
14 November 2020
Skepticism and Trust in Science
06 October 2020
Does Meritocracy Have Merit?
28 August 2020
Discriminating Streets
07 August 2020
The Ethics of Pet Keeping
27 June 2020
Money Matters
27 April 2020
Philosophy and the Superhero
11 April 2020
Is the Sentence Becoming Passé?
26 January 2020
Tolerance and Radical Disagreement
08 June 2019
The Wrong Abortion Question
31 October 2018
One Person, One Vote?
29 June 2018
Stop Silencing Sex Workers
23 April 2018
Is Punishment Wrong?
02 March 2018