Online Philosophy Resources Weekly Update
Here’s the weekly report on new and revised entries in online philosophy resources and new reviews of philosophy books.
New:
- Reichenbach’s Common Cause Principle, by Christopher Hitchcock (California Tech) and Miklós Rédei (London School of Economics).
Revised:
- Influence of Arabic and Islamic Philosophy on the Latin West, by Dag Nikolaus Hasse.
- Abraham Ibn Daud, by Resianne Fontaine and Amira Eran.
- Hasdai Crescas, by Shalom Sadik.
- Paul-Henri Thiry (Baron) d’Holbach, by Michael LeBuffe.
- Seneca, by Katja Vogt,
- Epistemology, by Matthias Steup and Ram Neta.
- Plato’s Parmenides, by Samuel Rickless.
- Practical Reason, by R. Jay Wallace.
IEP ∅
- Peter Godfrey-Smith (Sydney) reviews Self-Consciousness and ‘Split’ Brains: The Minds’ I (Oxford), by Elizabeth Schechter.
- Eric J. Silverman (Christopher Newport University) reviews Love: A New Understanding of an Ancient Emotion (Oxford), by Simon May.
- Nathan Ballantyne (Fordham) reviews On Evidence in Philosophy (Oxford), by William G. Lycan.
- Laura S. Keating (Hunter College/CUNY) reviews Locke’s Ideas of Mind and Body (Routledge), by Han-Kyul Kim.
- Monte Ransome Johnson (California-San Diego) reviews Aristotle’s Revenge: The Metaphysical Foundations of Physical and Biological Science (Editiones Scholasticae), by Edward Feser.
- Timothy Stoll (Franklin and Marshall College) reviews Forming Humanity: Redeeming the German Bildung Tradition (Chicago), by Jennifer A. Herdt.
Recent Philosophy Book Reviews in Non-Academic Media
- Brandom M. Terry interviews Judith Butler about her latest book, The Force of Nonviolence, at Boston Review.
Compiled by Michael Glawson
BONUS: Robot agency.
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