Online Philosophy Resources Weekly Update
Here’s the weekly report on new entries in online philosophical resources and new reviews of philosophy books.
Below is a list of recent updates, if there have been any, to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (IEP), Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (NDPR), 1000-Word Philosophy, and Wireless Philosophy (Wi-Phi).
New:
- Frantz Fanon, by John Drabinski (Amherst College).
Revised:
- Pragmatism, by Catherine Legg (Deakin) and Christopher Hookway.
- Bell’s Theorem, by Wayne Myrvold (Western Ontario), Marco Genovese, and Abner Shimony.
- Death, by Steven Luper (Trinity).
- Albert of Saxony, by Joél Biard (Tours).
- Eliminative Materialism, by William Ramsey (Nevada-Las Vegas).
IEP ∅
- Matthew A. Leisinger (Emmanuel College, Cambridge) reviews Locke and Cartesian Philosophy (Oxford), by Philippe Hamou and Marine Pécharman (eds.).
- Keith Ansell-Pearson (Warwick) reviews Deleuze’s Bergsonism (Edinburgh), by Craig Lundy.
- Peter A. Graham (Massachusetts-Amherst) reviews Making Morality Work (Oxford), by Holly M. Smith.
- Robert Wicks (Auckland) reviews Nihilism and Philosophy: Nothingness, Truth and World (Bloomsbury), by Gideon Baker.
- Manolo Martinez (Barcelona) reviews A Mark of the Mental: In Defense of Informational Teleosemantics (MIT), by Karen Neander.
- Murray Smith (Kent) reviews The Philosophical Hitchcock: Vertigo and the Anxieties of Unknowingness (Chicago), by Robert B. Pppin.
- Joe Balay (Christopher Newport) reviews Heidegger and the Problem of Consciousness (Indiana), by Nancy J. Holland.
- Ulrich Meyer (Colgate) reviews Nothing to Come: A Defence of the Growing Block Theory of Time (Springer), by Fabrice Correia and Sven Rosenkranz.
- Avery Kolers (Louisville) reviews Moral Evil in Practical Ethics (Routledge), by Shlomit Harrosh and Roger Crisp (eds.).
- Stéphane Marchand (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) reviews Against Those in the Disciplines (Oxford), by Sextus Empiricus.
- Vagueness, by Darren Hibbs (Nova Southern University).
Recent Philosophy Book Reviews in Non-Academic Media
- James G. Chappel reviews This Life: Secular Faith and Spiritual Freedom, by Martin Hägglund at The Boston Review.
Bonus: Courage & Epistemology
Compiled by Michael Glawson.
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