* Mark K. Spencer, Habits, Potencies, and Obedience (PDF)
* James Chastek, No choice is discovered, at "Just Thomism"
* A major portion of Antoni Gaudí's beatification process is completed, and now just requires final approval.
* Domenik Jarczewski & Wayne D. Riggs, Socializing Virtue Epistemology (PDF)
* Recorded Music Sales by Format Shares 1973-2024 (press the play button in the lower left-hand corner), by Mark Perry
* "God Is....": Saying Various Names of God, on Alan of Lille, at "Quodlibeta Theologia"
* Joseph M. Magee, Aristotle and Aquinas on Proving the Intellect's Immateriality (PDF)
* Nicholas Carr, Epistemological Slop, at "New Cartographies"
* Asanga Welikala, The 'Common Good' in Legal Constitutions, at "The New Digest"
* Stephen Harrop, Sufficient Reason Vindicated (PDF)
* Gregory B. Sadler is interviewed at "Why Philosophy?"
* Therese Cory, How to Reason Prudentially about Immigration: A Reply to Feser, at "Public Discourse". Unfortunately, I think Cory just pendulum-swings to the opposite of the error she diagnoses in Feser (who, however, I think is slightly more nuanced than she is suggesting). An obvious question that needs answering is how Cory's view differs from tutiorism; the claim that "Disagreement is legitimate when prudence fails, not when prudence is operating normally" would normally be a huge red flag for a rigorist position, for instance. I don't think such a position is what Cory intends, but it's what she seems to say throughout. My suspicion is that in trying to be concise she has confused the individual level of prudence (in which we must act according to our prudent judgment) with the social level of prudence (in which, inevitably, we have to deal prudently with differing prudent and apparently prudent judgments). But she does make some worthwhile points about prudence in the process.
* Simona Aimar and Carlotta Pavese, Technical Knowledge as Scientific Knowledge in Aristotle (PDF)
* Anand Vaidya & Manjula Menon, In light of brahman, at "Aeon"
* Gideon Lazar, Scotus on the Abolition of the Old Law
* Nicolae Turcan, The Phenomenology of Prayer and the Relationship Between Phenomenology and Theology (PDF)
* A. D. Hunt, The Problem with Nominalism, at "The Occidental Tourist"
* Alex Fisher, In defence of fictional examples
* Joseph Heath, Why philosophers hate that 'equity' meme, at "In Due Course". As people have pointed out before, there are more than a few oddities to the meme -- the people are not in the stadium, calling the left-hand side 'equality' is obviously arbitrary, the assumption seems to be that goods are limited, discrete, and smoothly distributable in a precise way. And, as Heath notes, it has the problem memes generally have -- you can label anything anything in a meme, and, outside very specific and obvious contexts, you start getting problems when you start asking why it should be labeled this way rather than some other way.