Online Philosophy Resources Weekly Update


This is the weekly report on new and revised entries at online philosophy resources, new reviews of philosophy books, new podcast episodes, recently published open access philosophy books, and more.

(If we missed anything, please let us know.)

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New

Revised:

  1. Nāgārjuna by Jan Christoph Westerhoff.
  2. Disability and Justice by Jessica Begon, Daniel Putnam, David Wasserman, Jeffrey Blustein, and Adrienne Asch.
  3. Heinrich Rickert by Andrea Staiti and Luca Oliva.
  4. Evolution by Roberta L. Millstein.
  5. Questions  by Charles Cross and Floris Roelofsen.

IEP

1000-Word Philosophy

BJPS Short Reads

Philosophy Podcasts and Other Media

  1. Philosophy Podcast Hub (via Jason Chen)

Recently Published Open Access Philosophy Books

  1. Paradoxical Ethics by Saul Smilansky (Oxford, 2026).

Book Reviews*

  1. Prototipos: Procesos de Investigación Artística sobre Tecnología y Vida by Sebastián Lomelí is reviewed by Sofía Falomir Sánchez at Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.
  2. Concepts at the Interface by Nicholas Shea is reviewed by Edouard Machery at Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews.

Compiled by Michael Glawson

* The Book Reviews section contains links to reviews of books by philosophers in non-academic media as well as in open-access reviews published in academic journals.

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praymont
praymont
1 hour ago

The Leiden Declaration on Artificial Intelligence and Mathematics seems philosophically interesting. E.g., “Current automated techniques can produce plausible but unreliable (or even incorrect) arguments which are difficult to distinguish from correct mathematical proofs. This applies not only to informal arguments, but also to formalizations, where the difficulty lies in the translation between computer-encoded and human presentations of concepts.” https://leidendeclaration.ai/