* Francesco Pierini, Inner speech and the phenomenology of poetry (PDF)
* Duncan Richter, Some Remarks of Anscombe's on Faith and Justice: A Note
* Richard Y. Chappell, The Gift of Life, at "Good Thoughts"
* Paul Faulkner, On the Nature of Faith and Its Relation to Trust and Belief (PDF)
* David, Initiating Unscientific Prelude, at "Words Without Knowledge"
* Joseph Heath, Illness is a social construct, at "In Due Course"
* Roberto di Ceglie, Thomas Aquinas and the certainty of hope in relation to faith and charity (PDF)
* Sam Kriss, Against Truth, at "Numb at the Lodge". One of the more amusing things about this article is that it lays a trap for certain kinds of rationalists and utilitarians by deliberately provocative and hyperbolic language aimed at attacking their insularity and brittle sense of superior intelligence and, judging from some of the responses, does so very effectively, as so very many of the responses showed a failure to understand even common figures of speech, like variant uses of the terms 'true' and 'false'. An interesting example of mocking people above their heads.
* Gene Callahan, Gorgias: Plato's Guide to Online Discussions, at "Front Porch Republic"
* Mark Windsor, The Uncanny as Anti-Sublime (PDF)
* Matt Whiteley, What a Squabble Within Academic Poetry Can Tell Us About Our Culture, at "The Isle Is Full of Noises"
* William F. Vallicella, Butchvarov's Paradox of Antirealism and Husserl's Paradox of Human Subjectivity, at "Philosophy in Progress"