Categories
Reviews
The Truman Show
Have you ever wondered whether everyone talks about you behind your back? Whether they are all keeping something from you? John McGuire discusses the Cartesian nightmare that is The Truman Show.
[Issue 32: June/July 2001]
Logic and its Limits by Patrick Shaw
Edward Ingram enjoys a surprisingly lively introduction to logic by Patrick Shaw.
[Issue 32: June/July 2001]
Towards the Definition of Philosophy by Martin Heidegger
Roger Caldwell reads some never-before translated lectures by an ambitious young Martin Heidegger.
[Issue 32: June/July 2001]
Nurse Betty
What happens when the barrier between our ‘real’ world and the fantasy world of film starts to crumble? Our man in the front row with the popcorn Thomas Wartenberg watches Nurse Betty succumb to madness.
[Issue 31: March/April 2001]
The Fourth Way by Donald Wilhelm
Robert Taylor ponders the politics of the information age with Donald Wilhelm.
[Issue 31: March/April 2001]
Making Sense of Taste: Food & Philosophy by Carolyn Korsmeyer
Is eating “a small exercise in mortality”? Erin McKenna consumes a tasteful but non-fattening book by Carolyn Korsmeyer.
[Issue 31: March/April 2001]
Time Code
In another intrepid exploration of the possibilities of the silver screen, our very own movie maestro Thomas Wartenberg takes notes on an experimental new film called Time Code.
[Issue 30: December 2000 / January 2001]
Truth and Progress by Richard Rorty
Is truth about the way the world is, or is it about what is convenient for society? Les Reid takes a look at a modern pragmatist and asks: Who’s Afraid of Richard Rorty?
[Issue 30: December 2000 / January 2001]
Nietzsche Studies (I)
H. James Birx looks at some books on Nietzsche.
[Issue 29: October/November 2000]
What Nietzsche Really Said by Robert Solomon and Kathleen Higgins
Patrick Scott, a new Nietzsche enthusiast, looks at… you’ve guessed it!
[Issue 29: October/November 2000]
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