Month: December 2024

Knowledge and Conditionals: Essays on the Structure of Inquiry

The book is a collection of thirteen essays devoted to themes in formal epistemology, philosophy of language, metaphysics and logic. Robert C. Stalnaker advertises it as a spiritual successor to his 1984 classic Inquiry. Indeed, the book is like Inquiry in two important respects. For one obvious thing, it follows a similar structural arc. Much as Inquiry‘s first half is devoted to …

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Knowing Other Minds

Many of us have spent a considerable amount of 2020 working and teaching in a much more solitary environment than we’re used to. Rather than conversing with one another in person, we are instead spending hours and hours staring at one another arranged in little boxes on a computer screen, listening to disembodied voices through …

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Hegel’s Concept of Life: Self-Consciousness, Freedom, Logic

Interest in Hegel’s Idealism has surged over the past thirty years and shows no sign of slowing. It is increasingly commonplace to view Hegel’s significance as more than mere esotericism in the history of philosophy and sociology. The interpretive camps defining this resurgence are multifarious, but one variation has gained particular traction. Broadly, this interpretive …

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Women Philosophers of Seventeenth-Century England: Selected Correspondence

Jacqueline Broad has produced a terrific volume and an invaluable resource for scholars and students. The volume showcases a large selection of letters in which four women philosophers of the early modern period — Margaret Cavendish, Anne Conway, Damaris Cudworth Masham, and Elizabeth Berkeley Burnet — exchange views with a number of their prominent philosophical, …

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Justice, Migration, and Mercy

In the United States, a comprehensive immigration reform bill was passed by the Senate in 2013, but eventually failed in the House. This bill was structured around a compromise — increased border security measures were to be exchanged for immigration amnesty for undocumented migrants currently inside the US. Many centrist politicians (including those in the …

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Arendt on the Political

David Arndt’s book is an excellent exposition of Arendt’s political thought. Anyone interested in Arendt would benefit from the clear presentation and analysis of the main concepts and ideas Arendt thought through in her writings; the careful distinctions he offers between the meanings Arendt gave to these concepts and the more common understanding of them; and …

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In the Shadow of Justice: Postwar Liberalism and the Remaking of Political Philosophy

I Katrina Forrester’s book is an engaging history of John Rawls’s intellectual development and the outpouring of work in political philosophy his ideas have engendered. She focuses on the evolution of Rawls’s theory of justice and the historical conditions from which it purportedly grew in the late 1940s and early 1950s. She discusses the responses of Rawls’s …

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