Peter Ludlow, who also writes under the name Urizenus Sklar, is a professor of philosophy at Northwestern University. Before moving to Northwestern, Ludlow taught for several years at University of Toronto, the University of Michigan, State University of New York at Stony Brook and was Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Syracuse University and Cornell University. He has done much interdisciplinary work on the interface of linguistics and philosophy.

PropertyValue
dbpedia-owl:Person/influenced
dbpedia-owl:Person/influencedBy
dbpedia-owl:influenced
dbpedia-owl:influencedBy
dbpedia-owl:thumbnail
dbpprop:abstract
  • Peter Ludlow, who also writes under the name Urizenus Sklar, is a professor of philosophy at Northwestern University. Before moving to Northwestern, Ludlow taught for several years at University of Toronto, the University of Michigan, State University of New York at Stony Brook and was Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Syracuse University and Cornell University. He has done much interdisciplinary work on the interface of linguistics and philosophy. His dissertation at Columbia University was on intensional transitive verbs, such as "seek" and "worship". Among his influential early articles were "Implicit Comparison Classes" (Linguistics and Philosophy, 1989), in which he argued for the syntactic reality of comparison class variables in adjectival constructions, and his paper with the semanticist Richard Larson, "Interpreted Logical Forms", in which he advocated a sententialist view of propositional attitude verbs (a view that has been criticized by Scott Soames in Chapter 7 of his book Beyond Rigidity). His first book, Semantics, Tense, and Time, was devoted to arguing that presentism, a metaphysical thesis that denies the reality of past and future events, is consistent with the intuitive truth of much of our tensed discourse. In recent years, he has been developing a view of linguistic meaning according to which meaning shifts are much more common than intuition suggests, and applying the view to controversies in epistemology. Ludlow has also established a research program outside of philosophy and linguistics. Here, his research areas include conceptual issues in cyberspace, particularly questions about cyber-rights and the emergence of laws and governance structures in and for virtual communities. His popular books include High Noon on the Electronic Frontier and Crypto Anarchy, Cyberstates, and Pirate Utopias. His professional books include Semantics, Tense and Time: an Essay in the Metaphysics of Natural Language. Ludlow participated as a member of the online community The Well, and also participated in virtual gaming communities such as Second Life and The Sims Online, where he took the character of an online journalist. MTV. com has described Ludlow as one of the 10 most influential video game players of all time, in part due to his role in showing how video game companies can be challenged as part of the gameplay. In the most famous controversy, reported in the New York Times and elsewhere, Ludlow began a virtual newspaper called The Alphaville Herald and reported on events in the Electronic Arts Corporation online game "The Sims Online" — including some blistering editorials against Electronic Arts Corporation and their failures at managing and policing the gamespace. Ludlow was subsequently kicked out of the game by Electronic Arts. Ludlow (with the journalist Mark Wallace) has cowritten a book about his career as a virtual world journalist titled, The Second Life Herald: The Virtual Tabloid that Witnessed the Dawn of the Metaverse. Ludlow has been known to participate in what he calls "game instantiation events"; in effect, these bring computer games to real life in some mildly subversive form. At South By Southwest 2006 in Austin, Texas, Make editor Phillip Torrone reprogrammed a Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner to be remotely directed, dressed it in a green frog suit, and played "real frogger" on 6th Street. Ludlow has described the events as attempts to subvert the comfortable if flawed distinction between the real world and virtual reality, as well as challenges to suburban conceptions of street decorum in the contemporary United States.
  • Peter Ludlow (nascido em 16 de janeiro de 1957), filósofo que também escreve sob o pseudônimo Urizenus Sklar, é professor de filosofia e lingüística na University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Antes de mudar-se para Michigan, Ludlow lecionou por vários anos na State University of New York at Stone Brook, e foi professor visitante de filosofia na Syracuse University e na Universidade Cornell. Suas áreas de pesquisa incluem questões conceituais sobre o ciberespaço, principalmente questões sobre ciberdireitos e sobre a emergência de leis e estruturas governamentais nas e para as comunidades virtuais. Entre seus livros populares encontramos High Noon on the Electronic Frontier e Crypto Anarchy, Cyberstates, and Pirate Utopias. Entre seus livros profissionais encontramos Semantics, Tense and Time: an Essay in the Metaphysics of Natural Language, e a edição de coletâneas sobre filosofia da mente, como Externalism and Self-Knowledge. Ludlow é membro da comunidade virtual The Well, e participa de comunidades de jogos virtuais como Second Life e The Sims Online, onde seu personagem é um jornalista. A MTV. com descreveu Ludlow como um dos dez jogadores de video game mais influentes de todos os tempos. Na controvérsia mais famosa, relatada no New York Times e outros lugares, Ludlow criou um jornal virtual chamado The Alphaville Herald no jogo The Sims Online, da empresa Electronic Arts, no qual fez editoriais agressivos contra a forma da Electronic Arts administrar o espaço virtual do jogo. Em decorrência disso, Ludlow foi expulso do jogo pela Electronic Arts.
dbpprop:color
  • B0C4DE
dbpprop:era
dbpprop:forProperty
  • List of characters in Jurassic Park
  • the fictional character from the ''Jurassic Park'' franchise
dbpprop:hasPhotoCollection
dbpprop:imageName
  • Ludlow.jpg
dbpprop:influenced
dbpprop:influences
dbpprop:mainInterests
dbpprop:name
  • Peter Ludlow
dbpprop:notableIdeas
dbpprop:reference
dbpprop:region
  • Western Philosophy
dbpprop:schoolTradition
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbpprop:wordnet_type
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Peter Ludlow, who also writes under the name Urizenus Sklar, is a professor of philosophy at Northwestern University. Before moving to Northwestern, Ludlow taught for several years at University of Toronto, the University of Michigan, State University of New York at Stony Brook and was Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Syracuse University and Cornell University. He has done much interdisciplinary work on the interface of linguistics and philosophy.
  • Peter Ludlow (nascido em 16 de janeiro de 1957), filósofo que também escreve sob o pseudônimo Urizenus Sklar, é professor de filosofia e lingüística na University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Antes de mudar-se para Michigan, Ludlow lecionou por vários anos na State University of New York at Stone Brook, e foi professor visitante de filosofia na Syracuse University e na Universidade Cornell.
rdfs:label
  • Peter Ludlow
  • Peter Ludlow
owl:sameAs
skos:subject
foaf:depiction
foaf:name
  • Peter Ludlow
foaf:page
is dbpedia-owl:Person/influenced of
is dbpedia-owl:influenced of
is dbpprop:disambiguates of
is dbpprop:influenced of
is dbpprop:redirect of
is owl:sameAs of