Categories
General Articles
Public Life, John Dewey, and Media Technology
Hans Lenk and Ulrich Arnswald use John Dewey’s distinction between public and private life to consider some implications of information technology.
[Issue 103: July/August 2014]
The Impossibility of Maximizing Good Consequences
Lawrence Crocker on lotteries, reasonable actions, and weird outliers.
[Issue 103: July/August 2014]
How Should I Live?
The following readers’ answers to this central human question each win a book.
[Issue 103: July/August 2014]
Ludwig Feuerbach (1804-1872)
Dale DeBakcsy tells us how Ludwig Feuerbach revolutionized philosophy and got absolutely no credit for it.
[Issue 103: July/August 2014]
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
Roger Caldwell rediscovers the bookish revolutionist.
[Issue 102: May/June 2014]
A Justification of Empirical Thinking
Arnold Zuboff tells us why we should believe our senses.
[Issue 102: May/June 2014]
Existence
Barbara Smoker probes why there is something rather than nothing.
[Issue 102: May/June 2014]
Doing Away With Scientism
Ian Kidd exposes the errors of the science fundamentalists.
[Issue 102: May/June 2014]
What’s The Worst That Could Happen?
Simon Coghlan tells us, with help from Derek Parfit.
[Issue 102: May/June 2014]
Swinburne’s Separations
Sally Latham on Swinburne’s argument that you can exist without your body.
[Issue 102: May/June 2014]
| Previous | 1 | ... | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | ... | 108 | Next |








