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54Both entertaining and startling, The Pig That Wants to Be Eaten offers one hundred philosophical puzzles that stimulate thought on a host of moral, social, and personal dilemmas. Taking examples from sources as diverse as Plato and Steven Spielberg, author Julian Baggini presents abstract philosophical issues in concrete terms, suggesting possible solutions while encouraging readers to draw their own conclusions: Lively, clever, and thought-provoking, The Pig That Wants to Be Eaten is a portable…Read more
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105Hay on whyThe Philosophers' Magazine 47 20-22. 2009.Philosophy has become more and more abstracted from people’s daily lives, so in a way, philosophers are a kind of joke in Britain. The only time they appearis in comedy and it seems to me really important to do something about this.
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96A piece of iMe: An interview with David ChalmersThe Philosophers' Magazine 43 41-49. 2008.The radical view, the view we’re kind of pushing, is that the iPhone can be seen literally as a part of my mind. I actually remember things: in virtue of this information being in the iPhone, it is part of my memory. The iPhone isn’t just a tool for my cognition, it’s part of my cognition.
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83The mind of KoreaThe Philosophers' Magazine 43 (43): 83-87. 2008.It was only after the liberation in 1945 that we started to reflect and revive again our traditional philosophy. But for a long time it was neglected. Many of our universities did not teach oriental philosophy or Korean philosophy at all. We learned Heiddegger, Nietzsche, Hegel, Kant.
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186Alien Ways of Thinking, on Stephen Mulhall On FilmFilm-Philosophy 7 (3). 2003.Stephen Mulhall _On Film_ London and New York: Routledge, 2002 ISBN 0-415-24796-9 142 pp.
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81Floated on the ideas marketThe Philosophers' Magazine 49 75-76. 2010.“I would go into a lunch of stockbrokers who would be coming to listen to the business philosopher, and I felt so nervous because I thought I was supposed to tell them where they should be putting their clients’ money on the basis of my knowledge of the history of ideas. I felt such a failure because I didn’t know what they should do with their clients’ funds.”
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183Philosophical autobiographyInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 45 (3). 2002.An examination of the genre of philosophical autobiography sheds light on the role of personal judgment alongside objective rationality in philosophy. Building on Monk's conception of philosophical biography, philosophical autobiography can be seen as any autobiography that reveals some interplay between life and thought. It is argued that almost all autobiographies by philosophers are philosophical because the recounting of one's own life is almost invariably a form of extended speech act of se…Read more
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178Michael Martin (ed.) The cambridge companion to atheismReligious Studies 44 (3): 367-371. 2008.
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132Britain’s best-loved dope dealerThe Philosophers' Magazine 54 (54): 121-126. 2011.“His hypothesis is that if you take dope you’re going to end up taking smack, but he’d actually got an incorrect application of Bayes’ theorem... the gateway theory, all obviously complete bollocks, based on a professor’s ineptitude in statistics.”
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96The long road to equalityThe Philosophers' Magazine 53 14-19. 2011.You can't go through a graduate programme in other humanities subjects and be considered competent in those fields unless you've done some work on gender and race issues. Feminist work is mainstream. In philosophy that's just not true. You could go through a philosophy degree to this day and never have a class by a woman, never have to encounter anything having to do with feminism or gender or race.
Canterbury, Kent, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy, Introductions and Anthologies |
| Philosophy, General Works |