* David Oderberg, Life makes mistakes, at "Aeon"
* Scott Casleton, Grotius Contra Carneades: Natural Law and the Problem of Self-Interest (PDF)
* Shalom Goldman, Israel as the Jesus among Nations, about the roles of the ideas of Chesterton and Maritain in shaping the Holy See's developing relation with Israel, at "Tablet"
* Maristela Rocha, A Study of the Metatheory of Assertoric Syllogistic (PDF)
* Matthew B. Crawford, Why Individualism Fails to Create Individuals, at "Hedgehog Review"
* Hein van den Berg, Wolff and Kant on Scientific Demonstration and Mechanical Explanation (PDF)
* Paul Kingsnorth, The Everlasting Man, at "The Abbey of Misrule"
* Gilbert Plumer, When Paintings Argue (PDF)
* Nadya Williams, You Are Not in Control: The Death of Boethius 1,500 Years On, at "Religion & Liberty Online"
* Amy Tyson, The False Promise of Device-Based Education, at "After Babel"
* Anna Giustina, Moods as Ways of Inner Awareness (PDF)
* Sean Parnell has recently had two good short popular op-eds on attacks on the Electoral College: 'One Neat Trick' to Rig the National Popular Vote Compact, and National Popular Vote Would Increase Distrust in Elections, both of which make points that are often overlooked.
* Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, but just the punctuation
* Jason Runyan, Including or excluding free will (PDF)
* Nguyễn Bình, “America’s Literary Giant.” On the Legacy of Edgar Allan Poe in Vietnam, at "LitHub"
* Harriet Fagerberg, A Domino Theory of Disease (PDF)
* Alexander Douglas, A Philosophical Blandemic?, at "As Difficult as Rare"
* Ana-Maria Cretu, Human Computers as Instruments (PDF)
* Sofia Quaglia, Animal Embryos Can Sense Predators and Food While Still Inside the Egg, at "Discover"
* Thomas D. Howes, Who's Who: Martin Rhonheimer, the Church's Swiss Army Knife, at "Public Discourse"