So who is your favourite Philosopher?
I really like Bertrand Russell and WVO Quine. I'm not sure if I can coherently answer why... just in terms of the body and range of their work, their style and methodology, and so on. I also like Chomsky a lot, and he really ought to count as a philosopher since he's influenced the discipline so much.
What are current trends in Epistemology?
There has been a pretty strong "normative turn" in epistemology. People like to think about knowledge in terms of "what is it that makes knowledge a good thing to have". Also, "Why is knowledge better than mere true belief". Other people have taken a "formal turn" in epistemology, which likes to think about knowledge in terms of probability functions and the like. I have sympathy with both camps, but think the normative people are doing more interesting work. I feel like some people in the formal camp are effected with Economistitus, a disease characterized by the belief that the more mathy something is, the more sciency and better it is.
Why should the ethical distinction be made between human life and nonhuman life?
I don't think such a distinction ought to be made! It seems worthwhile to distinguish between persons and nonpersons, but I don't see why there ought to be an ethical distinction between human persons and nonhuman persons.
Can somebody support the death penalty and still be considered a pacifist?
I think the way we ordinarily talk about pacifism admits a variety of interpretations. If by pacificism you mean just opposition to war, then I guess one could support the death penalty and be a pacifiist. It would be a weird combo, though.
Questions: What is the meaning/purpose of life?
I don't think that question has an answer! Its tough to see what a good answer to that question would look like, at any rate. I guess the best answer I could give would be that the purpose of life is to be an excellent person.
What do you think of pantheism?
It seems like it has about as much going for it as monotheism, that is, not much! I don't think either of monotheism or pantheism has the goods on the other in terms of reasonability.
Aside from teaching philosophy, what are other good lines of employment can philosophy students take?
If you are too lazy to get anything other than a BA, you could be a criminal investigator, or you could do anything freelance.
Anyway... this brings up another question, how does an analytic philosopher such as yourself view the works of the great dead philosophers of all the various schools of thought? For example Kant?
Many of them were fantastic thinkers. Kant, for instance, is held in high esteem by analytic philosophers. Many, myself included, think a student of philosophy (particularly at the pre-PhD level) ought not spend much time reading historical philosophy, just as a physics student wont actually read Einstein.
I don't see those as very comparable situations - folk physics being wrong requires people to be commonly and systematically mistaken about external reality (surely an uncontroversial claim!), emotivism (as I understand it) requires them to be commonly and systematically wrong about what they themselves mean when using moral language. Metaethics as a whole may be hideously complicated, but the particular question "do I, when saying something like ' Fifty was wrong to steal my chocolates', intend to make a statement of fact or an expression of disapproval?" is surely both simple and, unlike physical problems, accessible to introspection.
Emotivists don't think that people are mistaken about what they intend, or about what they think they mean. They just think people are mistaken about the semantic
content of some of their utterances.
That's really the best I can do... I have a hard time arguing against you since I'm a cognitivist myself!
I know your opinions about postmodernism. Do those extend to post-structuralists as well?
I suppose some (such as Foucault) who are associated with that movement have their merits, but on the whole there is much more chafe than wheat from pretty much every post-Kantian continental school.
Along those lines, do you agree with Chomsky that Derrida is purposefully obscure and uses pretentious language to mask the simplicity of his ideas?
Absolutely. Derrida is a perfect and utter charlatan and fraud, and I think very very lowly of any academic discipline that takes him seriously.
Are there are any other philosophers to whom you would extend that description?
Derrida is probably the worst of the bunch. A recent poll on a philosophy blog was on what person you most wish people would stop referring to as philosophers. The runaway winner was Ayn Rand, with Derrida coming in second and Leo Strauss coming in third.
Quite a few prominent feminist philosophers are worthless, too.
Now that I'm all caught up I look forward to being able to offer more comprehensive answers.
