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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Julian Baggini
From the editor
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Obituaries
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Mediawatch
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Ophelia Benson
Is naturalism an article of faith?
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Julian Baggini
Schools of thought
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Kids can astonish with the philosophical ideas they spontaneously have, but are they really able to follow through their implications systematically and logically? And isn’t that what philosophy is essentially about, not just having interesting ideas?
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Luciano Floridi
Faster than light?
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Elliott Sober
Did God have a hand in the origin of species?
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“The theory of evolution is about organisms evolving, populations evolving. What does this theory tell us about the quantum mechanics of micro-particles? The answer is ‘nothing’. There’s lots of stuff that happens in the world that the theory just isn’t telling us about. The existence of a God who occasionally intervenes in nature might be one of those things.”
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Mathew Iredale
Why are we cleverer than other primates?
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Ernie Lepore, Matthew Stone
Figures of speech
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We cannot explain our diverse practices for engaging with imagery through general pragmatic mechanisms. There is no general mechanism behind practices like metaphor and irony. Metaphor works the way it works; irony works the way it works.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Roy Sorensen
Dark Matters
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Shadows haunt the world of common sense by being “out there” independently of whether anyone is looking. Yet they are confi ned to a single sense: sight. Like ghosts, shadows evade tactile corroboration. They do not obey the laws governing material things.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Hans-Johann Glock
Zurich
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Stephen Law
Just knowing
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I remain entirely unconvinced that anyone who claims to “just know” that the dead walk among us, or that God exists, knows any such thing. Not only do I think the rest of us have good grounds for doubting their experience, I don’t believe it’s reasonable for them to take their own experience at face value either.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Ray Monk
Catching the tone
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Biography need not be reductive; it need not seek to explain the work of a writer through an appeal to a psychological or sociological theory, neither need it treat all the work of a writer as disguised autobiography. It can simply, like Boswell’s life of Johnson, seek to enable us to get to know someone.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Sarah Bakewell
Lives actually lived
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Like houses, philosophical lives are lived and breathed, used and abused. They are acted upon, changed, expanded, worn out and pushed to their limits bythe philosophers who inhabit them.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
David Edmonds
Contextualising ideas
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To understand Machiavelli’s concerns it helps to know about his complex relationship with the Medicis. To comprehend what animates Thomas Hobbes we need to recognise that he was writing in the aftermath of the English civil war.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
James Miller
The quest for self-knowledge
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It is hard to believe that the ancient philosophers were as rationally consistent in word and deed as they appear in the surviving lore about their lives. The myths are certainly charming – but they also make Socrates, Plato, and Diogenes the Cynic feel alien, remote, more like polished marble statues than fallible creatures of flesh and blood.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Nigel Rodgers, Mel Thompson
Human failings and frustrations
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Heidegger’s disastrously whole-hearted commitment to Nazism was not a simple political mistake. We need to ask what in his childhood and early career underlay his powerful and persistent feeling of Blut und Boden, blood and soil, that led him to support volkisch (nationalist/racist) calls for a charismatic national leader.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Annette C. Baier
Hume’s damage control
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We want to know about philosophers’ lives in part to see how they applied their philosophy to their own lives. Plato’s account of Socrates’ life, trial, and death sets a great example here, perhaps never equalled, just as few philosophers equal Socrates in integrity and courage.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
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Issue: 56
Simon Critchley
The lives of dead philosophers
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