Andrew I. Cohen, professor of Philosophy and Director of the Jean Beer Blumenfeld Center for Ethics, and Andrew J. Cohen, professor of Philosophy, co-authored a chapter on free speech and social media titled, “The Possibility and Defensibility of Nonstate ‘Censorship’,” in New Directions in the Ethics and Politics of Speech, edited by J.P. Messina (New York: Routledge, 2023). Messina is a philosopher now at Purdue who earned his MA at GSU in 2013. Andrew I. Cohen is soon to publish an anthology coedited with Kathryn McClymond, Moral Injury and the Humanities: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Cohen also reviewed for NDPR a recent book by David Gathier, Hobbes & Political Contractarianianism.
Bill Edmundson, Regents' Professor of Law Emeritus, published "Abraham Lincoln as Political Philosopher," in Oxford Studies in Political Philosophy, vol. 9, S. Wall and D. Sobel, eds., pp. 260–87 (2023), and "Political Equality, Epistocracy, and Expensive Tastes," in Lua Nova: Revista de Cultura e Política 117: 55–70 (2022).
Christie Hartley, professor of philosophy, with Lori Watson, published “Against Convergence Liberalism: A Feminist Critique,” in the Canadian Journal of Philosophy (2023), 1-19, doi.org/10.1017/can.2023.4. She also commented on Clare Chambers’s Intact: A Defence of the Unmodified Body at the Central Division Meeting of the American Philosophical Association in February.
Steve Jacobson, senior lecturer in Philosophy, published his book Musings on Big Questions, with Great River Learning.
Eddy Nahmias, professor of philosophy and neuroscience, and (not-much-longer) department chair, was coauthor with Eyal Aharoni, Judge Morris Hoffman, and Sharlene Fernandes of “Punishment as a scarce resource: a potential policy intervention for managing incarceration rates” to be published in Frontiers in Psychology.
Juan Piñeros Glasscock, assistant professor of philosophy, published his entry on 'Action' co-authored with Sergio Tennenbaum (University of Toronto) in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy in January.
Neil Van Leeuwen, associate professor of philosophy, will release his monograph, entitled Religion as Make-Believe: A Theory of Belief, Imagination, and Group Identity, with Harvard University Press in November 2023.
Sebastian Rand, associate professor of philosophy, is giving a paper titled "Time and Moral Salience" at the Surrey Center for Law and Philosophy (UK) on May 10. He is also giving an invited colloquium paper titled "'Absolut-freie Bewegung': Laws of Motion in Speculative Mechanics" at the International Hegel-Kongress in Stuttgart (June 7-10), and he is giving a paper titled "Mediation and Objectivity" at a workshop on "Hegel und die Objektivität" at the Freie Universität Berlin (July 10-12).