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The Philosopher as Lover
Continuing our series of personal interpretations of philosophy, Peter Rickman extols the passionate philosopher.
[Issue 21: Summer/Autumn 1998]
What’s New in…. Philosophy of Religion
Daniel Hill describes how the work of Alvin Plantinga has revolutionised Philosophy of Religion.
[Issue 21: Summer/Autumn 1998]
The discarded Lemon: Kant, prostitution and respect for persons
Timothy J. Madigan thinks Kant’s duty-based ethics could approve of prostitution.
[Issue 21: Summer/Autumn 1998]
Virtue ethics and the New Testament
Which matter most: virtues or duties? Bob Harrison thinks the early Christians had the answer.
[Issue 21: Summer/Autumn 1998]
What is natural about Natural Rights?
Do Natural Rights exist? Michael Birshan investigates one of the more persistent political assertions of the modern world in this prize-winning essay.
[Issue 21: Summer/Autumn 1998]
Drinks & Thinks
More news from the philosophy cafés and pubs, compiled by Bryn Williams.
[Issue 21: Summer/Autumn 1998]
Sick to Death?
Is suicide a disease to be treated, or a choice to be respected? Justin Busch tackles the problem by analysing the concept of disease.
[Issue 20: Spring 1998]
Free will & Predestination
Ralph Blumenau argues that there is more to the doctrine of predestination than we might think. To support his theory he looks back to the teaching of Original Sinner St. Augustine.
[Issue 20: Spring 1998]
Onward Christian soldiers
Russian philosophy was brought to the public eye by the recently deceased Sir Isaiah Berlin. In this article, David Limond explains the thinking of a philosopher who married political thinking and Christianity in a particularly Russian way.
[Issue 20: Spring 1998]
Drinks & Thinks
A roundup of news from the philosophy cafés.
[Issue 20: Spring 1998]
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