Categories
Reviews
Why Blame the Organization? by Raymond Pfeiffer
Michael Boylan enjoys Raymond Pfeiffer’s book on collective responsibility.
[Issue 39: December 2002 / January 2003]
Cities of Refuge
John Mann reviews three books on race, asylum and immigration by Matt Cavanagh, Michael Dummett and Jacques Derrida.
[Issue 38: October/November 2002]
The Foundations of Morality by George Frankl
Michael Williams has a problem with George Frankl’s psychoanalytic ethics.
[Issue 38: October/November 2002]
The Road to Perdition
Our philosophical film columnist Thomas Wartenberg ponders the complexity of human motives as he takes in the latest gangster movie, The Road to Perdition.
[Issue 38: October/November 2002]
Hegel: A Biography by Terry Pinkard
Ralph Blumenau immerses himself in a monumental biography of Hegel by Terry Pinkard.
[Issue 37: August/September 2002]
Closure: A Story of Everything by Hilary Lawson
Sam Nico provides closure on a new book by Hilary Lawson.
[Issue 37: August/September 2002]
Metropolis
Fritz Lang’s film Metropolis is a classic thanks to its timeless warning about the perils of technological mastery without social justice, says Scott O’Reilly.
[Issue 37: August/September 2002]
Eat Art, Busch-Reisinger Museum Harvard University
Anna Winestein loathed the Eat Art exhibition at Harvard.
[Issue 36: June/July 2002]
Defending Animal Rights by Tom Regan
Lisa Kemmerer cheers on Tom Regan as he defends the idea of animals having rights.
[Issue 36: June/July 2002]
Dreaming Souls by Owen Flanagan
Ilya Farber discovers a dream of a book by the quirky and perceptive Owen Flanagan.
[Issue 36: June/July 2002]
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