political philosophy |
81.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
22
Todd May
From Subjectified to Subject: Power and the Possibility of a Democratic Politics
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epistemology |
82.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
22
Eric Mandelbaum, Jake Quilty-Dunn
Believing without Reason, or: Why Liberals Shouldn’t Watch Fox News
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political philosophy |
83.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
22
Andrew Koppelman
Does Respect Require Antiperfectionism?:
Gaus on Liberal Neutrality
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weakness of will |
84.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
22
Agnes Callard
The Weaker Reason
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phenomenology |
85.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
22
Jody Azzouni
Conceiving and Imagining: Some Examples
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86.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
22
About The Harvard Review of Philosophy
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87.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Oliver Cronlinde Wenner
Editor's Note
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ethics |
88.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Robert Merrihew Adams
No-Fault Responsibility for Outcomes
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philosophy of mind |
89.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Alexis Burgess
What Is It Like To Be Asleep?
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aesthetics |
90.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Garry L. Hagberg
Wittgenstein, Music and the Philosophy of Culture
abstract |
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Wittgenstein’s scattered remarks on music, when brought together and then related to his similarly scattered remarks on culture, show a deep and abiding concern with music as a repository and conveyer of meaning in human life. Yet the conception of meaning at work in these remarks is not of a kind that is amenable to brief or concise articulation. This paper explores that conception, considering in turn (a) the relational networks within which musical meaning emerges, (b) what he calls a discernible “kinship” between composers and styles, (c) the embodied character of musical content, (d) the close and too-little-appreciated intricate connections between our capacity to make sense in music and in language (and the frequent dependence of the former on the latter) and the interaction of the musical theme with spoken language, and (e) music as a culturally-embedded phenomenon that is, as he said of language, possible only in what he evocatively, if too briefly, called “the stream of life.”
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philosophy of language |
91.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Alexander George
Quine’s Indeterminacy: A Paradox Resolved and a Problem Revealed
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epistemology |
92.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Cora Diamond
Between Realism and Rortianism:
Conant, Rorty and the Disappearance of Options
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metaethics |
93.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Ayoob Shahmoradi
A Critique of Non-Descriptive Cognitivism
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modern european philosophy |
94.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Lilian Alweiss
Kant’s Not so “Logical” Subject
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political philosophy |
95.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Peter Baumann
Defending the One Percent?:
Poor Arguments for the Rich?
abstract |
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This paper discusses the philosophical view proposed by Gregory Mankiw in his recent article “Defending the One Percent” (JEP 27-3, 2013): the just deserts view in application to income distribution. Mankiw’s view suffers from three unsolved problems: the Criteria Problem, the Measurement Problem, and the Problem of the Missing Desert Function. The overall conclusion is that Mankiw’s normative “Defense of the One Percent” fails quite drastically.
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philosophy of literature |
96.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
21
Simon Critchley
The Tragedy of Misrecognition:
The Desire for a Catholic Shakespeare and Hegel’s Hamlet
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97.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
20
Oliver Cronlinde Wenner
Editor's Note
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lecture |
98.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
20
Jonathan Dancy
Berkeley, Descartes and the Science of Nature:
(Or How Berkeley Tried to Put the Clock Back)
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political philosophy |
99.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
20
Samuel Scheffler
The Idea of Global Justice: A Progress Report
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metaphilosophy |
100.
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The Harvard Review of Philosophy:
Volume >
20
Adrian Moore
Some Recent Developments in Philosophy
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