Magazines and Op-Eds
Brownstein, M. 2025. The Threat of Trump is Vast. But Don't Underestimate Incremental Change. The Guardian.
Westra, E. and Kelly, D. 2024. Why Moral Progress is Annoying, Aeon Magazine.
Brownstein, M. 2020. Coronavirus calls for an aggressive Green New Deal. The Hill.
Madva, Alex. 2020. “Resistance Training.” The Philosophers’ Magazine. November 2020.
Blogs
Westra, Evan and Daniel Kelly (2024). "Potato, Potahto: Why some norm changes are more annoying than others." Paul Bloom's Small Potatoes Substack.
Brownstein, Michael, Daniel Kelly, and Alex Madva. 2021. “Individualism, Structuralism, and Climate Change.” Climate Matters: The Blog of the American Philosophical Association. November 18, 2021.
Aceytuno, Xol. 2021. “Project Mailbox Expected to Arrive Later This Semester.” The Poly Post, August 31, 2021.
Gozdecki, Aprille. 2021. “CPP’s California Policy Center Discusses Racial Gaps in Homeownership.” The Poly Post (blog). May 4, 2021.
Davidson, Lacey, and Daniel Kelly (2020). Norms and Bias: Minding a Different Kind of Gap Justice Everywhere (blog), as part of the Symposium on Bias in Context: Psychological and Structural Explanations of Injustice.
Gonzalez, Blanca. 2020. “CPP Prepares for 2020 Election.” The Poly Post. September 21, 2020.
Madva, Alex. 2020. “Structural Change, Individual Change, and Four-Story Walkups.” Justice Everywhere (blog). May 29.
Madva, Alex. 2020. “Implicit Bias: Knowledge, Justice, and the Social Mind.” Imperfect Cognitions (blog). July 14.
Brownstein, Michael. 2019. A four-part blog series on The Implicit Mind.
Lopez, Melissa. 2018. “KRS-ONE Headlines ‘Cut the Bias.’” The Poly Post (blog). April 10, 2018.
Madva, Alex. 2017. “Replies to Saray Ayala-López, Sally Haslanger, and Jennifer Saul.” The Brains Blog. Ergo Symposium on “A Plea for Anti-Anti-Individualism,” March 6.
Schwenkler, John, Michael Brownstein, Nick Byrd, Jules Holroyd, Neil Levy, Edouard Machery, Alex Madva, Shannon Spaulding, and Chandra Sripada. 2017. “What Can We Learn from the Implicit Association Test? A Brains Blog Roundtable.” The Brains Blog (blog). January 17.
Kelly, Daniel. (2016). The Deep, Modern, and Extremely Recent Histories of Disgust, The Queen Mary Center for the History of Emotion's History of Philosophy Blog.
Madva, Alex. 2016. “Stereotyping, Rationality, & the Cognitive Architecture of Virtue.” The Brains Blog (blog). April 15.
Saul, Jennifer and Michael Brownstein. 2016. "Implicit bias in the age of Trump." OUP Blog.
Saul, Jennifer and Michael Brownstein. 2016. Introduction to Implicit Bias and Philosophy. Imperfect Cognitions blog.
Interviews and Mentions
The Thought Project, 2025. "Why Social Revolutions Start Small." Interview with Brownstein.
Coren, Michael. 2023. Brownstein quoted in "The surprisingly simple way to convince people to go green." The Washington Post.
ABC Radio, 2022. Brownstein interviewed for "Should individuals bear the largest burden for climate action," on "Future Tense."
Venugopal, Arun. 2022. Brownstein quoted in “Bridgewater Mall incident reignites New Jersey debate over police and racial profiling.” Gothamist.
Drabinski, John E. 2022. “Alex Madva, Vanessa Wills, Ian Olasov, and Dana Miranda on "The Movement for Black Lives: Philosophical Perspectives.” Conversations in Atlantic Theory.
How Does It Feel to Be a Problem? Directed by Thomas Keith. 2021. 91 minutes. Madva interviewed about implicit bias.
Moody, Michael. 2020. “Implicit Biases: The Undercurrent of Social Injustices with Dr. Madva.” The Elements of Being 20. Podcast interview, September 29. 72 minutes.
Muthukumar, Akila. 2020. Madva quoted in “Ending Capital Punishment Before Another Life Is Lost.” Harvard Political Review, July 22.
Daniel Kelly on the Human Centered podcast for The Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford (Fall, 2019).
Daniel Kelly on the Purdue Philosophy Department podcast The Grindstone (Fall, 2019).
Book Symposia and Roundtable Discussions
Ethics Discussion: Michael Cholbi and Alex Madva’s, “Black Lives Matter and the Call for Death Penalty Abolition,” with a critical précis by Erin Kelly. PEA Soup (blog). April 18, 2018.