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).

SEP

New:

  1. Frantz Fanon, by John Drabinski (Amherst College).

Revised:

  1. Pragmatism, by Catherine Legg (Deakin) and Christopher Hookway.
  2. Bell’s Theorem, by Wayne Myrvold (Western Ontario), Marco Genovese, and Abner Shimony.
  3. Death, by Steven Luper (Trinity).
  4. Albert of Saxony, by Joél Biard (Tours).
  5. Eliminative Materialism, by William Ramsey (Nevada-Las Vegas).

IEP

NDPR

  1. Matthew A. Leisinger (Emmanuel College, Cambridge) reviews Locke and Cartesian Philosophy (Oxford), by Philippe Hamou and Marine Pécharman (eds.).
  2. Keith Ansell-Pearson (Warwick) reviews Deleuze’s Bergsonism (Edinburgh), by Craig Lundy.
  3. Peter A. Graham (Massachusetts-Amherst) reviews Making Morality Work (Oxford), by Holly M. Smith.
  4. Robert Wicks (Auckland) reviews Nihilism and Philosophy: Nothingness, Truth and World (Bloomsbury), by Gideon Baker.
  5. Manolo Martinez (Barcelona) reviews A Mark of the Mental: In Defense of Informational Teleosemantics (MIT), by Karen Neander.
  6. Murray Smith (Kent) reviews The Philosophical Hitchcock: Vertigo and the Anxieties of Unknowingness (Chicago), by Robert B. Pppin.
  7. Joe Balay (Christopher Newport) reviews Heidegger and the Problem of Consciousness (Indiana), by Nancy J. Holland.
  8. Ulrich Meyer (Colgate) reviews Nothing to Come: A Defence of the Growing Block Theory of Time (Springer), by Fabrice Correia and Sven Rosenkranz.
  9. Avery Kolers (Louisville) reviews Moral Evil in Practical Ethics (Routledge), by Shlomit Harrosh and Roger Crisp (eds.).
  10. Stéphane Marchand (Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne) reviews Against Those in the Disciplines (Oxford), by Sextus Empiricus.

1000-Word Philosophy

  1. Vagueness, by Darren Hibbs (Nova Southern University).

Wireless Philosophy

Recent Philosophy Book Reviews in Non-Academic Media

  1. 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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