Shen-yi Liao

451 Followers
217 Following
337 Posts
Professionally, a philosophy professor who works on cognition + oppression; also an intellectual omnivore who co-authors promiscuously. Personally, @liaoshenyi
Websitehttps://liao.shen-yi.org

Fun fact about Microsoft #Windows: if you type Ctrl-Shift-Alt-Win-L, LinkedIn will open in your default browser. This is an OS hotkey that cannot be turned off.

I know this reads like a joke but it isn't.

The Corn Exchange
Idea: AIM away messages, but for text.
How do people post/read all the social media networks??

This paper on two senses of 'good', and their different semantic properties, looks very interesting!

https://philpapers.org/rec/MANGPA

Poppy Mankowitz, Good people are not like good knives - PhilPapers

Is anything good simpliciter? And can things count as ‘good’ independent of the context in which ‘good’ is used? Traditionally, a number of meta-ethicists have given positive answers. But more recently, ...

The Taiwan Philosophical Logic Colloquium will be held 9-11 December in Taipei at National Taiwan University. The theme is Pathways of Epistemological Enquiries. The deadline for submissions is 20 August.
https://philevents.org/event/show/112466
The Fifth Taiwan Philosophical Logic Colloquium: Pathways of Epistemological Enquiries

Introduction The Taiwan Philosophical Logic Colloquium (TPLC) is a biennial conference series established in 2012 and hosted by the Department of Philosophy at National Taiwan University. For its fifth iteration, TPLC-V, the conference is organized by the Center for Asian Philosophy and Analytic Philosophy within the same department. This conference series, funded by Ms. Wendy Huang and Shun Yih Ltd, serves as a platform to foster dialogue among philosophers and logicians, covering a broad range of significant issues. Our ambition is that the TPLCs will further stimulate the growth of logic and analytic philosophy in East Asia. The central theme of TPLC-V is “Pathways of Epistemological Enquiries”. We aim to facilitate a comparative study of different approaches to epistemological issues, striving towards a unified way of addressing epistemological questions. To achieve this goal, our plan is to invite a diverse group of epistemologists, ranging from those identified as traditional epistemologists to logicians specializing in epistemic logic. KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:  Matt McGrath (Washington University in St. Louis)  TBA INVITED SPEAKERS (in alphabetical order): Bob Beddor (National University of Singapore) Jeremy Fantl (University of Calgary)  David Kinney (Princeton)  Kasaki Masashi (Nagoya University) Jingyi Wu (London School of Economics and Political Science) TBA SUBMISSION OF ABSTRACTS FOR CONTRIBUTED TALKS: All epistemologists are cordially invited to submit their abstracts by 20 August, 2023. Authors should submit an extended abstract, which is no less than one page but no more than four pages (A4 size, single space). Please put on a separate page with the details of (all) authors, including full names, titles, affiliations, email addresses. By convention, the first author will be the corresponding author, unless special notification is added. Each submission will be reviewed. Abstracts and cover letters must be submitted as PDF files and sent to Ms. Meng-Han Hua [[email protected]].  Notification of acceptance for contributed talks will be sent out on September 7, 2023.  TRAVEL GRANTS FOR GRADUATES AND JUNIOR RESEARCHERS: The conference plans to offer a select number of travel grants, encompassing accommodation and travel expenses, to graduate students and junior researchers. There may be instances of partial expense reimbursement. When submitting your abstract for the conference, please ensure to indicate in the cover letter if you wish to apply for a travel grant. POST-CONFERENCE PUBLICATION:  TPLCs has been flourishing since 2012 and we have had several successful events, including TPLC 2014, AWPL-TPLC 2016. We have published several volumes of post-conference proceedings, including Structural Analysis of Nonclassical Logics (Proceedings of TPLC 2014), and Philosophical Logic: Current Trends in Asia (Proceedings of AWPL-TPLC 2016), in the Logic in Asia (LIAA) Book Series. We plan to publish a post-conference proceedings for TPLCV-2023 as a new volume of the LIAA Book Series by Springer. All authors of papers presented at the conference are encouraged to submit a full paper. All papers submitted will be refereed to high journal standards. Acceptance to the conference does not guarantee that the paper will be published. A formal schedule concerning the submission of manuscripts and other details will be announced after the conference.  A NOTE ON HOTEL-ROOM BOOKING Due to the high demand for our hotel rooms, we strongly advise you to contact us as soon as possible. The earlier we receive your request, the more efficiently we can guarantee your room reservation.  ORGANIZATION COMMITTEE (in alphabetical order):  Tony Cheng (National Chengchi University) Duen-Min Deng (National Taiwan University) Ko-Hung Kuan (Soochow University)  Kok Yong Lee (National Chung Cheng University)  Hsuan-Chih Lin (Soochow University)  Shawn Standefer (National Taiwan University)  Ren-June Wang (National Chung Cheng University) FURTHER CONTACT:  Kok Yong Lee [[email protected]] Ko-Hung Kuan [[email protected]]

Today, I was the one who cut up fruits for my parents (instead of the other way around).

For a (South) Asian household, felt like a full circle moment.

The fruit cutting baton has been passed on.

IYKYK.

I also think the handwringing about 'first-gen' designation shows that you can move the goal but the goalposts will always remain gameable (or something better metaphor).

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/03/education/edlife/first-generation-college-admissions.html

Are You First Gen? Depends on Who’s Asking

With so many variations on what constitutes higher education as well as family, it’s no wonder there are so many definitions. And that matters.

The New York Times

Especially naive since their allies in this fight are already making their next move: "The Pacific Legal Foundation, a libertarian activist group, has already sued a selective school, Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in Alexandria, Va., for using economic factors as stand-ins for race in admissions."

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/02/us/affirmative-action-university-of-california-davis.html

How Colleges Admissions Might Diversify Without Affirmative Action

To build a diverse class of students, the medical school at U.C. Davis ranks applicants by the disadvantages they have faced. Can it work nationally?

The New York Times

The no-race-but-yes-socioeconomic affirmative action essay is such an old trope. Nevertheless, in light of the ruling that seems to gesture against "correlates" of race, repeating the trope feels either naive or disingenuous.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/04/opinion/race-academia-preferences.html

Opinion | On Race and Academia

After the Supreme Court’s ruling on affirmative action, I have some experiences to share.

The New York Times