381.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
18 >
Issue: 2
Bruce B. Suttle
SOCRATES REVISITED
|
|
|
382.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
18 >
Issue: 2
Kurt Mosser
COMMENT ON ROBINSON, “LANGTON AND TRADITIONALISM ON THINGS IN THEMSELVES”
|
|
|
383.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
18 >
Issue: 2
William L. Vanderburgh
A COMMENTARY ON COOK’S “GETTING CLEAR ON THE TWO-ENVELOPE PARADOX”
|
|
|
384.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
18 >
Issue: 2
Sarah Sawyer
REFLECTING ON CONTENT SKEPTICISM
|
|
|
385.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Rex Martin
THE JUST WAR THEORY OF WALZER AND RAWLS
|
|
|
386.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
David Reidy
RAWLS’S CONCEPTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS:
A BRIEF DEFENSE
|
|
|
387.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
David Hildebrand
THE NEOPRAGMATIST TURN
|
|
|
388.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Eric Reitan
PURSUING THE BELOVED COMMUNITY:
THE INCOMMENSURABILITY OF VIOLENCE AND JUSTICE IN THE THOUGHT OF MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.
|
|
|
389.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Thomas Tuozzo
WHY ARE THERE TWO DEFINITIONS OF SHAPE IN PLATO’S MENO
|
|
|
390.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Dawn Jakubowski
SOCIAL JUSTICE AND THE ETHICS OF RECOGNITION
|
|
|
391.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
David Beisecker
INTERPRETATION AND FIRST-PERSON AUTHORITY:
DAVIDSON ON SELF-KNOWLEDGE
|
|
|
392.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Erin M. Cline
AUTONOMY OR APPROPRIATENESS?:
CONTRASTING SELVES IN THE DEMOCRACRY OF THE DEAD
|
|
|
393.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
David Taylor
THE MEREOLOGICAL THEORY OF TIME
|
|
|
394.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Heimir Geirsson
MORAL TWIN EARTH:
THE INTUITIVE ARGUMENT
|
|
|
395.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Thomas Peard
WORLD HUNGER AND THE MORAL REQUIREMENTS OF SELF-SACRIFICE
|
|
|
396.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Paul R. Gyllenhammer
THE PASSIVITY OF OPTIMALIZING PRACTICES:
A DEVELOPMENT OF HUSSERL’S TRANSCENDENTAL AESTHETICS
|
|
|
397.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Christopher Robertson
SLOTE ON ORDINARY MORAL THOUGHT AND THEORIZATION
|
|
|
398.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Whitley Kaufman
WHY WOULD SOMEONE DO WRONG KNOWINGLY?
|
|
|
399.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Teresa Robertson
(IN THE FICTION/MYTH) THE NUMBER SEVENTEEN CROSSES THE RUBICON
|
|
|
400.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Lydia L. Moland
THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING COMMITTED:
THOUGHTS ON KORSGAARD’S SOURCES OF NORMATIVITY
|
|
|