SEP, IEP, NDPR, Wi-Phi Weekly Update


Listed below are the past week’s additions and updates to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP), the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (IEP), Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (NDPR), and Wi-Phi Wireless Philosophy, appearing here via special arrangement with Philosophical Percolations. They were first posted in PhilPercs’ “Saturday Linkorama” along with a collection of other goodies. Thanks to Jon Cogburn and Mona Rocha for collecting the links.

SEP:

  1. Justification Logic (Sergei Artemov and Melvin Fitting) [REVISED: November 20, 2015] Changes to: Main text, Bibliography, notes.html, supplement.html.
  2. Backward Causation (Jan Faye) [REVISED: November 18, 2015] Changes to: Main text, Bibliography.
  3. Moral Epistemology (Richmond Campbell) [REVISED: November 18, 2015] Changes to: Main text, Bibliography.
  4. Black Reparations (Bernard Boxill) [REVISED: November 18, 2015] Changes to: Main text, Bibliography.
  5. Rule Consequentialism (Brad Hooker) [REVISED: November 18, 2015] Changes to: Main text, Bibliography.
  6. Scottish Philosophy in the 19th Century (Gordon Graham) [REVISED: November 18, 2015] Changes to: Main text, Bibliography.
  7. Mechanisms in Science (Carl Craver and James Tabery) [NEW: November 18, 2015].
  8. Thomas Jefferson (M. Andrew Holowchak) [NEW: November 17, 2015].
  9. Locke On Freedom (Samuel Rickless) [NEW: November 16, 2015].
  10. Scientific Method (Hanne Andersen and Brian Hepburn) [NEW: November 13, 2015].
  11. The Legal Concept of Evidence (Hock Lai Ho) [NEW: November 13, 2015].

IEP:

  1. Tina Botts’ Legal Hermeneutics.
  2. Francesco Bellucci’s Charles Sanders Peirce: Logic.

NDPR:

  1. Samuel H. Baker reviews Dominic Scott’s Levels of Argument: A Comparative Study of Plato’s Republic and Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics.
  2. Martin Kusch reviews Annalisa Coliva’s Extended Rationality: A Hinge Epistemology.
  3. Ram Neta reviews Ernest Sosa’s Judgment and Agency.
  4. Allan Bäck reviews Lambert of Auxerre’s Logica, or Summa Lamberti.
  5. Daniel Dwyer reviews Robert E. Wood’s The Beautiful, the True and the Good: Studies in the History of Thought.
  6. Michael Cholbi reviews Costica Bradatan’s Dying for Ideas: The Dangerous Lives of the Philosophers.
  7. Scott M. Campbell reviews Peter Manchester’s Temporality and Trinity.
  8. Paul A. Roth reviews Hubert Dreyfus’ and Charles Taylor’s Retrieving Realism.
  9. Dan Haybron reviews Michael A. Bishop’s The Good Life: Unifying the Philosophy and Psychology of Well-Being.
  10. Vanessa de Harven reviews J. Clerk Shaw’s Plato’s Anti-hedonism and the Protagoras.
  11. Frank Chouraqui reviews David Morris and Kym Maclaren (eds.)′ Time, Memory, Institution: Merleau-Ponty’s New Ontology of Self.
  12. Paul Churchland reviews Richard Rorty’s Mind, Language, and Metaphilosophy: Early Philosophical Papers.

Wi-Phi:

  1. Elizabeth Brake ’s Government and Marriage (Government’s Role).
  2. Elizabeth Brake’s Government and Marriage (Minimal Marriage).
Disputed Moral Issues - Mark Timmons - Oxford University Press
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