News

  • Philosophy Chair Nicholas Evans and Criminology Assoc. Prof. Neil Shortland sit side by side

    Professors Study Future of AI in Warfare and Policy

    Philosophy Chair Nicholas Evans and Criminology Assoc. Prof. Neil Shortland are researching the future of artificial intelligence in warfare and policy under a pair of Department of Defense Minerva Grants worth $4.2 million, leading teams that include paid student researchers and other UML and outside faculty.
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  • Philosophy Professor John Kaag in front of a bookshelf

    Philosophy Prof. John Kaag Links AI with Famous Writers and Thinkers for 'Talking' E-Books

    Philosophy Prof. John Kaag is deeply concerned about the decline of literacy, and he’s using AI to do something about it. Through a new, AI venture, Rebind Publishing, he has enlisted a roster of famous scholars and authors, including Margaret Atwood, Deepak Chopra and Roxane Gay, to “discuss” classic e-books with readers.
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  • Chancellor Jacquie Moloney holds the hand of theatre arts student Lucas Bermudez, as philanthropist Nancy L. Donahue and theatre arts students Raphaela Pereira and Cristian Ramos Delgado look on

    Nancy L. Donahue Celebrates the Arts with $2 Million Gift

    This year, the Nancy L. Donahue Celebration of the Arts celebrated the Lowell philanthropist’s $2 million donation to renovate Durgin Concert Hall. It is only her latest gift to the university.
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  • A man in a face covering hands a small blue sticker to a student, who is holding open a small booklet

    Students Explore the Gray Areas at ‘Ethics Fest’

    More than 250 students were challenged to think about ethics and social responsibility in new ways at UMass Lowell’s first annual Ethics Fest, hosted by the Donahue Center for Business Ethics and Social Responsibility.
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  • UML Asst. Philosophy Prof. Nicholas Evans

    Professor Examines Ethics of Biomedical Research on Soldiers

    Asst. Prof. of Philosophy Nicholas Evans has won a $209,749 grant to study the ethics of conducting research into biomedical enhancements on members of the military. The three-year grant from The Greenwall Foundation comes with an appointment as a Faculty Scholar in Bioethics.
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  • Carol Hay

    Ethical Questions in a Pandemic

    Rationing health care amidst a pandemic is ethically complex, says Assoc. Prof. of Philosophy Carol Hay. What is clear is that COVID-19 is exposing deep inequalities in access to health care and other basic resources that existed long before the pandemic arrived, she says.
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  • UMass Lowell Asst. Prof. of Philosophy Joel Michael Reynolds

    Reynolds Gets $250,000 NEH Grant for Disability Work

    Asst. Prof. of Philosophy Joel Michael Reynolds is co-directing a series of community conversations on disability and technology as part of a $250,000 National Endowment for the Humanities grant. He’s also starting a journal on the philosophy of disability.
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  • Students and community members filled the Luna Theater for the first "Philosophy and Film" movie this fall.

    Movies and Philosophy Go Together Like Popcorn and Butter

    The Philosophy and Film series at the Luna Theater downtown brings students and community members together to watch popular movies and then discuss them with a philosophy professor. The free movies are shown monthly during the academic year.
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  • The Hocking library in Madison, N.H.

    Philosophy Chair Asks Students to Ponder Big Questions

    Philosophy Chair John Kaag loves to ask students the big questions – such as “Who am I?” and “Why am I here?” – and answers them for himself in his upcoming book, “American Philosophy: A Love Story.”
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  • Mock trial team co-captains

    Mock Trial Team Advances to Championship Qualifier

    The university’s mock trial team is advancing from regionals to the Opening Round Championship Series – one of eight tournaments leading to the national championships – for the first time.
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  • UMass Lowell Image

    Philosophy Prof: Resistance Isn’t Futile

    Carol Hay, an assistant professor of philosophy, earned the American Philosophical Association's 2015 Gregory Kavka/UC Irvine Prize in Political Philosophy, regarded as the most prestigious prize in the field.