Online Philosophy Resources Weekly Update


Here’s the weekly report of what’s new at some useful online philosophy resources.

We check the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (IEP), Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (NDPR),and occasionally some other sites for updates weekly and report them right here.

If you think there are other regularly updated sites we should add to this feature, feel free to suggest them in the comments.

SEP

New:

  1. Skepticism About Moral Responsibility, by Gregg Caruso (Corning Community College).
  2. William Heytesbury, by Miroslav Hanke (University of West Bohemia) and Elzbieta Jung (Lodz).
  3. Presentism, by David Ingram (York), and Jonathan Tallant (Nottingham).

Revised:

  1. Propositions, by Matthew McGrath (Missouri), and Devin Frank (Illinois).
  2. Xenophanes, by James Lesher (UNC-Chapel Hill)
  3. Liberalism, by Gerald Gaus (Arizona), Shane D. Courtland (Minnesota), and David Schmidtz (Arizona).
  4. Curry’s Paradox, by Lionel Shapiro (Connecticut) and Jc Beall (Connecticut).
  5. Georg [György] Lukács, by Titus Stahl (Groningen).
  6. Privacy, by Judith DeCew (Clark).
  7. Platonism in the Philosophy of Mathematics, by Øystein Linnebo (Oslo).
  8. Axiomatic Theories of Truth, by Volker Halbach (Oxford) and Gregg Caruso (SUNY) and Graham E. Leigh (Göteborgs).
  9. Ibn Bâjja [Avempace], by Josép Puig Montada (Complutense University of Madrid).
  10. Sociobiology, by Catherine Driscoll (North Carolina State).
  11. Descartes’ Modal Metaphysics, by David Cunning (Iowa).
  12. The Normativity of Meaning and Content, by Kathrin Glüer (Stockholm) and Åsa Wikforss (Stockholm).
  13. Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Properties, by Dan Marshall (Lingnan) and Brian Weatherson (Michighan-Ann Arbor).
  14. Supervenience, by Brian McLaughlin (Rutgers) and Karen Bennett (Cornell)
  15. The Grounds of Moral Status, by Agnieszka Jaworska (California-Riverside) and Julie Tannenbaum (Pomona College).
  16. Possible Objects, by Takashi Yagisawa (California State-Northridge).

IEP  

  1. Plato: The Timaeus, by Frank Grabowski (Rogers State).

NDPR 

  1. Jerry L. Walls (Houston Baptist University) reviews Hell and the Mercy of God (Catholic University of America), by Adrian J. Reimers.
  2. Margaret Atherton (Wisconsin-Milwaukee) reviews Descartes, Malebranche, and the Crisis of Perception (Oxford), by Walter Ott.
  3. G.R.F. Ferrari (UC-Berkeley) reviews Plato’s Symposium: A Critical Guide (Cambridge), by Pierre Destrée and Zina Giannopoulou (eds.).
  4. Kristin Gjesdal (Temple) reviews Hegel on Philosophy in History (Cambridge), by Rachel Zuckert and James Kreines (eds.).
  5. Michael Barilan (Sackler School of Medicine-Tel Aviv University) reviews Dignity: A History (Oxford), by Remy Debes (ed.).
  6. Evan Thompson (British Columbia) reviews Evolving Enactivism: Basic Minds Meet Content (MIT), by Daniel D. Hutto and ERik Myin.
  7. Matthew D. Walker (Yale-NUS College) reviews Aristotle’s Concept of Mind (Cambridge), by Erick Raphael Jiménez.
  8. Brent Adkins (Roanoke College) reviews Deleuze and Ancient Greek Physics: The Image of Nature (Bloomsbury), by Michael James Bennett.
  9. Frederick Kroon (Auckland) reviews The Vindication of Nothingness (Editiones Scholasticae), by Marco Simionato.
  10. Jonathan Maskit (Denison University) reviews Nature and Experience: Phenomenology and the Environment (Rowman and Littlefield), by Bryan E. Bannon (ed.).

Bonus: Ethical Conundrums (SMBC)

Compiled by Michael Glawson (University of South Carolina)

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments