Categories
Reviews
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]
Just Ask The Dust
Existentialism goes to the movies. Nick DiChario finds that the novel fills spaces the film doesn’t even have.
[Issue 62: July/August 2007]
A Plausible God: Secular Reflections on Liberal Jewish Theology by Mitchell Silver
Joel Marks asks ‘New God or no God?’.
[Issue 62: July/August 2007]
The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins
Mark Vernon questions Richard Dawkins’ state of self-delusion.
[Issue 62: July/August 2007]
Moreel Esperanto by Paul Cliteur
Floris van den Berg takes a course in Paul Cliteur’s moral Esperanto.
[Issue 61: May/June 2007]
The Kantianism of Hegel and Nietzsche by Robert Zimmerman
Lesley Chamberlain wants to rescue Kant from an interesting book by Robert Zimmerman.
[Issue 61: May/June 2007]
The Western as Philosophy
Revisiting the Western convinces Thomas Wartenberg that historical progress is not just a simple question of good heroically triumphing over evil.
[Issue 61: May/June 2007]
Shakespeare in Hollywood
Francis Akpata argues that Shakespeare would be a film director not a playwright in today’s high-media world.
[Issue 60: March/April 2007]
Frontiers of Justice: Disability, Nationality, Species Membership by Martha Nussbaum
Jean Chambers witnesses Martha Nussbaum raise a high bar for standards of international social justice.
[Issue 60: March/April 2007]
The Voyage Out by Virginia Woolf
Ernest Dempsey gives a feminist analysis of Virginia Woolf’s first novel.
[Issue 60: March/April 2007]
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