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General Articles: Articles
The Problem With Zombies
Rebecca Hanrahan says that just because you can imagine zombies doesn’t mean they’re possible, or that they can tell us anything about consciousness.
[Issue 67: May/June 2008]
The Wood That Finds Itself A Violin
Yahia Lababidi contemplates the implacable calling to produce great works.
[Issue 67: May/June 2008]
In Defense Of Dueling
Ryan Ruby intellectually attacks, feints and parries in favour of legally reinstating the duel as a means of settling personal disputes.
[Issue 67: May/June 2008]
Did Duchamp’s Urinal Flush Away Art?
Roy Turner scorns the fact that after Duchamp, critics have questioned the status of ‘traditional’ Western art, making the act of designation the sole determinant of art.
[Issue 67: May/June 2008]
Remembering Peter Hare (1935-2008)
John Corcoran, Alexander Razin and Tim Madigan pay tribute to their friend.
[Issue 66: March/April 2008]
Thracymacus Buys A House
Plato’s astounding legendary lost dialogue is translated with an introductory note by Mark Cyzyk, Master of the College of Antiquities at the University of Vlastos.
[Issue 66: March/April 2008]
Absurdity, God and the sad chimps we are
James DuBois wonders whether meaning can be found in the face of the apparent absurdity of life.
[Issue 66: March/April 2008]
Atlas Shrugged @ 50+
Tibor Machan considers the continuing appeal of the moral philosophy of Ayn Rand, more than fifty years after the publication of her greatest work.
[Issue 66: March/April 2008]
An Argument About Free Will
Luke Pollard and Rebecca Massey-Chase dialogue about freedom vs determinism.
[Issue 66: March/April 2008]
Wilde and Morality
Peter Benson deconstructs the moral intrigues of Dorian Gray.
[Issue 65: January/February 2008]
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