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Articles by John Kaag ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>
Many scholars loathe generative AI but it has immense power to engage the intellectual curiosity of students as long as academics truly embrace it, argues John Kaag
Campus-based education has its advantages but, for first-gen students, its digital complement can have more, say Jonathan van Belle and John Kaag
Determination to make your own way is key to success in academia, but scholars¡¯ research, teaching and even their lives can be transformed by a chance encounter or event
Legal action should not be required to convince universities to do more to help expectant mothers graduate without delay, says John Kaag
Existentialism may now seem more relevant to philosophy undergraduates, but a woeful John Kaag shares their mood of blank despair
Eight years ago, Carol Hay and John Kaag took the same position at the same university, and their lives since then offer fascinating insight into academic career progression
Simon Blackburn, Mariana Alessandri and John Kaag on why reports of Socrates¡¯ impending demise are greatly exaggerated
Three academics examine buildings, art and statues that arguably have no place on a campus in 2015
In the age of the bottom line, it is time for philosophy to refocus on what actually matters, argue John Kaag and David O¡¯Hara
Meetings are an inescapable annoyance for most academics, but there are ways to make them more tolerable, says John Kaag
As John Kaag has discovered, parenting a toddler involves a rather different set of challenges from the ones posed by the academy
Somewhere, in a class past or future, sits someone absolutely unforgettable - your worst student. Ever. John Kaag confronts the existential terror of a pedagogical puzzle