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). There’s also a section listing recent reviews of philosophy books appearing in popular media.
New:
- Second-order and Higher-order Logic, by Jouko Väänänen (Helsinki).
- The St. Petersburg Paradox, by Martin Peterson (Texas A&M).
Revised:
- Feminist Perspectives on the Body, by Kathleen Lennon.
- Reconciliation, by Linda Radzik and Colleen Murphy.
- Ibn ‘Arabî, by William Chittick.
- The Philosophy of Digital Art, by Katherine Thomson-Jones and Shelby Moser.
- Implicit Bias, by Michael Brownstein.
- Japanese Zen Buddhist Philosophy, by Shigenori Nagatomo.
- Pythagoreanism, by Carl Huffman.
- Jacques Derrida, by Leonard Lawlor.
- Private Language, by Stewart Candlish and George Wrisley.
- Leibniz’s Philosophy of Physics, by Jeffrey K. McDonough.
- Generalized Quantifiers, by Dag Westerståhl.
- Medieval Mereology, by Andrew Arlig.
- Darwinism, by James Lennox.
- Perfect Goodness, by Mark Murphy.
- James Frederick Ferrier, by Jenny Keefe (Wisconsin-Parkside).
- Edward Baring (Drew) reviews Theory and Practice (Chicago), by Jacques Derrida.
- Bernard Reginster (Brown) reviews Well-Being as Value Fulfillment: How We Can Help Each Other to Live Well (Oxford), by Valerie Tiberius.
- Petri Ylikoski (Helsinki) reviews Understanding, Explanation, and Scientific Knowledge (Cambridge), by Kareem Khalifa.
- Thomas Sheehan (Stanford) reviews Time and Trauma: Thinking Through Heidegger in the Thirties (Rowman and Littlefield), by Richard Polt.
- John P. Sullins (Sonoma State) reviews Nihilism and Technology (Rowman and Littlefield), by Nolen Gertz.
- Andrew Platt (Stony Brook) reviews Physics and Metaphysics in Descartes and in His Reception (Routledge), by Delphine Antoine-Mahut and Sophie Roux (eds.).
- Leslie MacAvoy (East Tennessee State) reviews Heidegger Becoming Phenomenological: Interpreting Husserl Through Dilthey, 1916-1925 (Rowman and Littlefield), by Robert C. Scharff.
- Aidan McGlynn (Edinburgh) reviews Fallibilism: Evidence and Knowledge (Oxford), by Jessica Brown.
- James Pearson (Bridgewater State) reviews Logic from Kant to Russell: Laying the Foundations for Analytic Philosophy (Routledge), by Sandra Lapointe (ed.).
- Kristen Hessler (SUNY-Albany) reviews Human Dignity and Human Rights (Oxford), by Pablo Gilabert.
- The Death Penalty, by Benjamin S. Yost (Providence College / Cornell).
Compiled by Michael Glawson
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