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Southwest Philosophy Review
Volume 38, Issue 2, July 2022
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Displaying: 1-18 of 18 documents
commentaries
1.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume
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38
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Issue: 2
Karl Aho
Can Cynics Possess Cakes and Enjoy Them Too? Comments on G.M. Trujillo, Jr.’s “Possessed: The Cynics on Wealth and Pleasure"
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2.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Sabrina B. Little
The Beautiful Sophist: Comments on Larkin
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3.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
John Casey
What I Fear About Living Most Is Wasting My Time: Commentary on Scott Aikin’s “Epicureans on Death and Lucretius’s Squandering Argument”
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4.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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Samuel A. Taylor
Comments on Simpson’s “More Clarity About Concessive Knowledge Attributions”
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5.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Nicholas Charles
Comments on Vollbrecht
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6.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Robert A. Elisher
Is Jamesian Evidentialism a Coherent Position?
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7.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
Dave Beisecker
Remarks on Farley and Gould’s “A Rossian Account of the Normativity of Logic”
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8.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Deborah K. Heikes
Comments on “Colorblindness, Hermeneutical Marginalization and Hermeneutical Injustice”
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9.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Alexandra T. Romanyshyn
Comments on Gilmore
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10.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Rachael Yonek
Commentary on Patrick Bondy’s “Avoiding Epistemology’s Swamping Problem”
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11.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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Sarah Woolwine
Commentary on “Caring for Identity: Disability and Representation”
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12.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
A.G. Holdier
Comments on “Is Annihilation More Severe than Eternal Conscious Torment?”
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13.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Levi Durham
Review of “Against Indifference Objection to the Fine-Tuning Argument”
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14.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Shannon Hayes
Response to “Quotidian Apocalypse?: Tosaka Jun’s Critical Theory in a New Age of Crisis” by Emerson Bodde
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15.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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Michael Portal
Response to “Critical Commodities: Adorno on Beethoven and Jazz”
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16.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
Emily McGill
Comments on Andréa Daventry, “Seeing Oneself as a Source of Reasons: Gaslighting, Oppression, and Autonomy”
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17.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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Issue: 2
Jennifer Wargin
Humility as Transcendence
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There is currently a tremendous surge in interest in the virtue of humility among contemporary philosophers and psychologists. Yet despite its recent popularity, identifying necessary and sufficient conditions for humility has proven quite difficult. Here, drawing on insights from several ‘inattentive’ accounts of humility, I offer a new account that locates the virtue in a transcendent orientation to the self and others such that one sees the self and others in proper perspective. I call this account the transcendent account of humility.
18.
Southwest Philosophy Review:
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38
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Issue: 2
Patrick Miller
Levinas’ Critique of Gurvitch in the Early French Reception of Heidegger
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