* Jill North, The Complex Structure of Quantum Mechanics, at "Blog of the APA"
* Agnes Bolinska & Joseph D. Martin, The tragedy of the canon; or, path dependence in the history and philosophy of science (PDF)
* Srikanth Reddy, Hannah Arendt, Poet, at "The Paris Review"
* Owen Ware, The Unity of Reason and the Highest Good (PDF)
* Michael Lucchese, Christian Institutions in a New World, at "Public Discourse"
* Marius Stan, Laws and natural philosophy (PDF)
* Paul Kalligas, Plotinus, at the SEP
* Dolores G. Morris, Closure as a Stance (PDF)
* Helen DeCruz, Her lively and sweet countenance, on the notion of 'countenance' in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literature, as well as some of the philosophical ideas behind it, at "Wondering Freely"
* Christopher P. Martin, Spinoza's Formal Mechanism (PDF)
* Andrew Radde-Gallwitz, God Is Not a Thing: A Response to Dale Tuggy, a guest post at Fr. Aidan Kimel's "Eclectic Orthodoxy"
* Philip Cary, The Inner Word Prior to Language: Augustine as Platonist Alternative to Gadamerian Hermeneutics (PDF)
* Albania is considering the possibility of ceding a token territory and recognition of sovereignty to the Bektashi Order, which, if done, would create a new European microstate. The Urdhri Bektashi was originally founded as a Sufi brotherhood in the Ottoman Empire, which moved from Turkey to Albania when its lodges were forcibly closed during the founding of the Turkish Republic. The Dedebaba (spiritual leader of the Bektashis) has apparently indicated that he envisions the state as being organized on the analogy of Vatican City. Without knowing much about the particular local details, this general sort of move seems reasonable to me, at least when it is actually feasible; and, as the history of the Bektashi Order itself shows, there is a potential value to major religious organizations not being subject to the whims of nationalist politics.
* Christopher Smeerk, Philosophical geometers and geometrical philosophers (PDF)
* Evan Thompson, Clock time contra lived time, on the debate between Einstein and Bergson, at "Aeon"