Department of Philosophy


  • Who’s Counting?

    Anat Schechtman on non-quantitative notions of infinity

    Who’s Counting?

  • “It’s Always Our Decision Who We Are”

    Bob Solomon and Kathleen Higgins’ ‘80s Love Story

    “It’s Always Our Decision Who We Are”

  • On the Beauty of Crosswords

    There are at least three big ways in which Robbie Kubala, assistant professor of philosophy at UT Austin, appreciates crossword puzzles. He’s exceptionally good at doing them, for one, and they’re a shared interest with his partner. They’re also an object of philosophical interest.

    On the Beauty of Crosswords

  • Spring Books Unfold

    Disentangling: The Geographies of Digital DisconnectionOxford University Press, July 2021Edited by Paul C. Adams, Professor, Department of Geography and the Environment, and André Jansson, Karlstad University After the rapid rise of digital networking in the 2000s and 2010s, we are now seeing a rise of interest in how people can disentangle their lives from the…

    Spring Books Unfold

  • Leaf Through a Good Book

    Keep your to-read list up-to-date with our fall book list, featuring a selection of titles from College of Liberal Arts faculty members and alumni.

    Leaf Through a Good Book

  • When human life begins is a question of politics – not biology

    A Texas law that aims to eliminate almost all abortions in the state is part of a long-standing nationwide movement to restrict the right to abortion.

    When human life begins is a question of politics – not biology

  • A Look at Our Latest Books

    2021 Spring and Summer titles from our college community.

    A Look at Our Latest Books

  • Lab–grown embryos and human–monkey hybrids: Medical marvels or ethical missteps?

    In Aldous Huxley’s 1932 novel “Brave New World,” people aren’t born from a mother’s womb.

    Lab–grown embryos and human–monkey hybrids: Medical marvels or ethical missteps?

  • Shake Up Your Winter Reading

    Winter 2020-21 books from our college community.

    Shake Up Your Winter Reading

  • Living in a Material World: Philosopher Galen Strawson tackles a few of life’s nagging questions

    Writer and actor Stephen Fry says Galen Strawson “opens windows and finds light-switches like no other philosopher writing today,” and novelist Ian McEwan simply dubs Strawson “one of the cleverest men alive.” High praise for this UT professor of philosophy, who discusses his latest book, Things That Bother Me: Death, Freedom, The Self, Etc. with Life…

    Living in a Material World:  Philosopher Galen Strawson tackles a few of life’s nagging questions

  • First Class: Rethinking Health Care Through the Liberal Arts

    The doors of the Dell Medical School have opened for its first class of future doctors, and they are on a mission to get the training they need to make a difference in the lives of future patients, their communities and even medicine itself. Of the 50 members in the school’s inaugural class, three graduated…

    First Class:  Rethinking Health Care Through the Liberal Arts

  • What’s So Funny About the Liberal Arts?

    We’ve all heard the jokes about liberal arts majors, inspired by stereotypes that students in the humanities, social sciences and languages are destined to lives of underemployment: The science major asks, “Why does it work?” The engineering major asks, “How does it work?” The business major asks, “How much will it cost?” The liberal arts…

    What’s So Funny About the Liberal Arts?

  • Grand Victory

    Liberal Arts alumnus Wes Anderson (Philosophy ’90) won a Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy in January and also received his first Academy Award nomination for Best Director for “The Grand Budapest Hotel” (2014). The whimsical and complex comedy earned a total of nine Academy Award nominations and took home four…

    Grand Victory

  • Defending Artistic Expression

    Should artistic expression receive the same degree of legal protection as other types of speech, such as political, religious, commercial, or educational speech? Should it enjoy less freedom, or more? Michael Adams, a Plan II Honors junior majoring in Asian Cultures and Languages and Biology, penned this first-prize winning response during the Spring 2014 Freedom of Speech Essay Contest. In…

    Defending Artistic Expression

  • Plan II, Philosophy Alumnus nominated for Academy Award

    Zachary Heinzerling, Plan II and Philosophy ’06, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary for his film Cutie and the Boxer. It debuted at the Sundance Film Festival, where he earned the Best Director Award (U.S. Documentary). The film follows the complicated relationship of husband and wife artists Ushio and Noriko Shinohara. Heinzerling…

    Plan II, Philosophy Alumnus nominated for Academy Award

  • Books: Fall 2012

    Fall 2012 titles from our college community.

    Books: Fall 2012

  • In Memoriam: Fall 2012

    James “Jim” R. Soukup, former professor of government, died May 26 at age 83. Soukup began his teaching career at the university in 1956, where he was a threetime Fulbright scholar to Japan for the study of labor politics and later served on the Fulbright National Selection Committee. He was instrumental in the development of…

    In Memoriam: Fall 2012

  • Cost of Free Speech

    The Cost of Political Speech With a record $2.4 bill ion spent by candidates in the last U.S. presidential election, the “Free Speech Dialogue” held Feb. 10 delved into the controversial topics of how money complicates political speech and who is entitled to First Amendment rights. “I would like students to walk away with a…

    Cost of Free Speech

  • Retired Faculty: Spring 2011

    More than 30 College of Liberal Arts professors from more than a dozen departments have retired over the past year, after spending decades serving their students and the university community. Retirees include Linguistics Professor Robert King, who was the founding dean of the College of Liberal Arts and served in that post from 1979–1989 and…

    Retired Faculty: Spring 2011

  • Research Briefs: Spring 2011

    Being Poor Can Suppress Children’s Genetic Potentials Growing up poor can suppress a child’s genetic potential to excel cognitively even before the age of 2. A study of 750 sets of twins by Assistant Professor Elliot Tucker-Drob does not suggest that children from wealthier families are genetically superior or smarter. They simply have more opportuni-…