Categories
Reviews
Philosophers Behaving Badly by Nigel Rodgers and Mel Thompson
Stephen Juan reviews the bad behaviour reported by Nigel Rodgers and Mel Thompson.
[Issue 65: January/February 2008]
The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power by Joel Bakan
Lisa Kemmerer calls corporations to account under the guidance of Joel Bakan.
[Issue 65: January/February 2008]
The Departed
Eric Wills reveals how Nietzschean morality is displayed in Martin Scorsese’s Oscar-winning movie.
[Issue 65: January/February 2008]
Zizek!
Grant Bartley! investigates the film as a distillation of the man.
[Issue 64: November/December 2007]
Pop Culture ‘and Philosophy’ Books
John Shelton Lawrence reviews the genre of ‘and philosophy’ books.
[Issue 64: November/December 2007]
Is This Some Kind Of Joke?
Tim Madigan laughs at platypi.
[Issue 64: November/December 2007]
Pi and the Movie Mind
A number of recent films deal with mathematics and mathematicians. Can we learn something from them or are they misleading? Peter Stone investigates.
[Issue 64: November/December 2007]
A Political Philosophy: Arguments for Conservatism by Roger Scruton
Floris van den Berg criticises Roger Scruton’s splendid isolation.
[Issue 63: September/October 2007]
Gentle Regrets: Thoughts from a Life by Roger Scruton
Robert Cheeks praises an intellectual memoir by Roger Scruton, Britain’s best-known conservative philosopher.
[Issue 63: September/October 2007]
The Politics of Education
Judith Suissa considers the intersection of political philosophy and philosophy of education in Alan Bennett’s new film The History Boys.
[Issue 63: September/October 2007]
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