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), 1000-Word Philosophy, and occasionally some other sites for updates 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: Ø

Revised:

  1. Contractualism, by Elizabeth Ashford (St. Andrew’s) and Tim Mulgan (St. Andrew’s).
  2. George Boole, by Stanley Burris (Waterloo).
  3. Origen, by Mark J. Edwards (Oxford).
  4. Simon of Faversham, by Ana María Mora-Márquez (Göteborgs).
  5. Jacques Derrida, by Leonard Lawlor (Penn State).
  6. Epicurus, by David Konstan (Brown).

IEP

  1. Natural Kinds, by Zdenka Brzovic (Rijeka).

1000-Word Philosophy

  1. Mengzi’s Moral Psychology, Pt. 1: The Four Moral Sprouts, by John Ramsey (Northern Colorado).
  2. Mengzi’s Moral Psychology, Pt. 2: The Cultivation Analogy, by John Ramsey (Northern Colorado).

Wireless Philosophy  Ø

NDPR

  1. Stephen R. Palmquist (Hong Kong Baptist University/Sogang University) reviews Kant and the Question of Theology (Cambridge), by Chris L. Firestone, Nathan A. Jacobs, and James H. Joiner (eds).
  2. Mats Bergman (Helsinki) reviews Peirce’s Speculative Grammar: Logic as Semiotics (Routledge), by Francesco Bellucci.
  3. P.D. Magnus (SUNY-Albany) reviews Scientific Collaboration and Collaborative Knowledge: New Essays (Oxford), by Thomas Boyer-Kassem, Conor Mayo-Wilson, and Michael Weisberg (eds.).
  4. Samuel Lebens (Haifa) reviews Radical Skepticism and the Shadow of Doubt: A Philosophical Dialogue (Bloomsbury), by Eli Hirsch.
  5. M. T. Lu (St. Thomas-Minnesota) reviews Abortion Rights: For and Against (Cambridge), by Kate Greasley and Christopher Kaczor.
  6. Christopher Hamilton (King’s College London) reviews The Philosopher: A History in Six Types (Princeton), by Justin E. H. Smith.
  7. Henk W. de Regt (Vrije Universiteit-Amsterdam) reviews True Enough (MIT), by Catherine Z. Elgin.

BONUS: Identity, Vagueness, and Metaphysical Payback

Compiled by @MichaelGlawson (University of South Carolina)

 

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