Kritike

Kritike: An Online Journal of Philosophy is a biannual journal of philosophy published by the Department of Philosophy, University of Santo Tomas. The editors-in-chief are Paolo Bolaños and Roland Theauas Pada. The journal publishes both articles and book reviews. Its focus lies on interdisciplinary approaches to philosophy, especially Filipino philosophy, oriental thought and East-West comparative philosophy, continental philosophy, and Anglo-American philosophy.

Kritike
DisciplinePhilosophy
LanguageEnglish
Edited byPaolo Bolaños and Roland Thauas Pada
Publication details
History2007–present
Publisher
Department of Philosophy, University of Santo Tomas (Philippines)
FrequencyBiannually
Yes
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Kritike
Indexing
ISSN1908-7330
OCLC no.502390973
Links

Journal articles are published in either English or Filipino.

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is abstracted and indexed in The Philosopher's Index, Web of Science, Scopus, MLA Bibliography, Humanities International Complete, Humanities International Index, International Directory of Philosophy, ASEAN Citation Index, and Directory of Open Access Journals.

gollark: I am saying that gods are also complicated so this doesn't answer anything.
gollark: For purposes only, you understand.
gollark: There are lots of *imaginable* and *claimed* gods, so I'm saying "gods".
gollark: So basically, the "god must exist because the universe is complex" thing ignores the fact that it... isn't really... and that gods would be pretty complex too, and does not answer any questions usefully because it just pushes off the question of why things exist to why *god* exists.
gollark: To randomly interject very late, I don't agree with your reasoning here. As far as physicists can tell, while pretty complex and hard for humans to understand, relative to some other things the universe runs on simple rules - you can probably describe the way it works in maybe a book's worth of material assuming quite a lot of mathematical background. Which is less than you might need for, say, a particularly complex modern computer system. You know what else is quite complex? Gods. They are generally portrayed as acting fairly similarly to humans (humans like modelling other things as basically-humans and writing human-centric stories), and even apart from that are clearly meant to be intelligent agents of some kind. Both of those are complicated - the human genome is something like 6GB, a good deal of which probably codes for brain things. As for other intelligent things, despite having tons of data once trained, modern machine learning things are admittedly not very complex to *describe*, but nobody knows what an architecture for general intelligence would look like.

See also

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