- Introspection: First‐person access in science and agency: By Maja Spener Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. ISBN: 9780198867449
- What a jerk!
- Irony, Tragedy, Deception
- Knowledge Aided by Observation†
- Quietist Elements in Adorno
- The Unity of the Moral Domain
- Moral Articulation: On the Development of New Moral Concepts, by Matthew Congdon Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024, ISBN: 9780197691571
- T. H. Green and Henry Sidgwick on free agency and the guise of the good
- The unity argument: Phenomenology’s departure from Kant
- Das Wissen der Person: Eine Topographie des menschlichen Geistes By Pirmin Stekeler‐Weithofer Edited by Leander Berger, Jakob Kümmerer, and Max Stange Hamburg: Felix Meiner, 2022. ISBN 978–3–7873‐4129‐0
- The Puzzle of Empty Formal Indications: On the ‘Deferred’ Meaning of Heidegger’s Language
- Anscombe on the shallowness of consequentialism
- An Indeterminate Conception of Practical Reasoning
- Seeing through the forms ‐ towards a Platonic indirect realism
- Conscience and Bad Conscience
- Experience and naturalism
- The art of thinking as an intersubjective practice: Eloquence, affect, and association in the Port‐Royal Logic
- A processual account of progress. On Rahel Jaeggi’s Fortschritt und Regression
- Obscure representations from a pragmatic point of view
- Who are Nietzsche’s slaves?
- The generality problem of perception
- The Kantian origin of Adorno’s concept of metaphysical experience
- Modalization and demodalization: On the phenomenology of negation
- Acting as causing change
- A project of “impure” enquiry—Williams’ historical self‐consciousness
- How to decide what to do: Why you’re already a realist about value
- Vindicating universalism: Pragmatic genealogy and moral progress
- Torturous withdrawal: Emotional compulsion in addiction
- Love’s realism: Iris Murdoch and the importance of being human
- Unalienated labor as cooperative self‐determination: Aristotle and Marx
- The factivity of practical knowledge
- Ontology and oppression: Race, gender, and social reality. By Katharine Jenkins New York: Oxford University Press. 2023. pp. 280. ISBN: 9780197666777
- A genealogy of politics: Vindicatory, pragmatic, and realist
- Ecological grief as a crisis in dwelling
- Kant and the transformation of natural history. By Andrew Cooper Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023. pp. ix+249. ISBN: 9780192869784. £60 Hbk.
- Conservatism and justified attachment
- How to lie to God: Kant’s Thomistic turn
- Die Wirksamkeit des Wissens: Eine politische Epistemologie By Frieder Vogelmann Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 2022. ISBN 978351829972, 30€
- Wilfrid Sellars: The metaphysics of practice—Writings on action, community, and obligation. Edited by Kyle Ferguson and Jeremy Randel Koons Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023, ISBN: 9780192866820, £90 Hbk.
- On feeling unable to continue as oneself
- Correction to “Can there be a feature‐placing language?”
- Genealogy: A conceptual map
- Pippin’s The Culmination, ‘logic as metaphysics’, and the unintelligibility of Dasein
- Standing to praise
- The pecking order: Social hierarchy as a philosophical problem. By Niko Kolodny, Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 2023. xii + 480pp. ISBN: 9780674248151
- Swimming problems: Hegel, Kant, and the demand for metatheory
- Kant on freedom & rational agency. By Markus Kohl, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2023. pp. 399
- I, myself, move
- Review of Ralph Walker Objective imperatives
- Blaming the dead
- Kant, race, and racism: Views from somewhere. By Huaping Lu‐Adler, Oxford University Press. 2023
- Du Châtelet, induction, and Newton’s rules for reasoning
- Phenomenology is explanatory: Science and metascience
- Schlick, intuition, and the history of epistemology
- Hume and the fiction of the self
- Husserl on knowing essences: Transworld identity and epistemic progression
- Defending (perceptual) attitudes
- Acting from knowledge
- Acting on reasons: Synchronic executive control
- The whitewashing of blame
- Hume and Kant on imaginative resistance
- The origins of sedimentation in Husserl’s phenomenology
- “Belief” and Belief
- Is Margaret Cavendish a naïve realist?
- Representation in action
- Emulative envy and loving admiration
- Correction to ‘On the eve of the “Philosophy of Symbolic Forms”: Cassirer and Hegel’
- Schelling’s late philosophy in confrontation with Hegel. By Peter Dews, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2022. pp. 344. $110 (hardback)
- Transcendental arguments and metaphysical neutrality: A Wittgensteinian proposal
- Extravagance and misery: Hegel on the multiplication and refinement of needs
- Kant on race and the radical evil in the human species
- Moderate realist ideology critique
- Willful testimonial injustice as a form of epistemic injustice
- Against theological readings of Sartre
- Listening to algorithms: The case of self‐knowledge
- Reason, reasoning, and the taking condition
- Joint action and spontaneity
- Fish as fellow creatures—A matter of moral attention
- We and us: The power of the third for the first‐person plural
- Cassirer’s concept of a symbolic form reconsidered
- On the eve of the “Philosophy of Symbolic Forms”: Cassirer and Hegel
- Judgement and sense in modern French philosophy. By Henry Somers‐Hall. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2022, p. 270. $76.94 (hardcover). ISBN: 131651790X
- Presentations and evaluations: A new look at Husserl’s distinction between objectifying and non‐objectifying acts
- The critical limits of phenomenology: Husserlian phenomenology as a modest metaphysics of appearance
- The metaphysics science needs: Deleuze’s naturalism
- Plurigenealogies: Marriage and address to women in Foucault’s Confessions of the Flesh
- Sex, truth, and law: Rereading Foucault’s History of Sexuality after volume 4, The Confessions of the Flesh
- Hello darkness my old friend: What is wrong with being friends with people with immoral beliefs?
- Critical Idealism as Method: Ernst Cassirer and the Philosophy of Symbolic Forms
- Carnap and the a priori
- Veridiction and juridiction in Confessions of the Flesh
- Reflections on the concept of institution
- Hegel’s logic and metaphysics. By Jacob McNulty, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2023. xxi + 264 pp. ISBN: 978‐1‐316‐51256‐2
- Perception, force, and content
- “The compound mass we term SELF”: Mary Shepherd on selfhood and the difference between mind and self
- German philosophy and the First World War. By Nicolas de Warren, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2023. pp. 426. ISBN: 9781108526180
- How hard is it?: On Kieran Setiya’s Life Is Hard: How Philosophy Can Help Us Find Our Way
- Bernard Williams on the guise of the good
- Kant’s missing analytic of artistic beauty
- Erratum to “The shaken realist: Bernard Williams, the war, and philosophy as cultural critique”
- Schelling on freedom, evil and imputation: A puzzle
- Sartre and Frankfurt: Bad faith as evidence for three levels of volitional consciousness
- Imagining the end: Mourning and ethical life. By Jonathan Lear, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 2022. ISBN 978‐0‐674‐27259‐0
- Sartre, Kant, and the spontaneity of mind
- Kant’s will at the crossroads: An essay on the failings of practical rationality. by Jens Timmermann, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2022. pp. 192. $70.00 (hb). ISBN: 9780192896032
- Nietzsche and Friendship. By Willow Verkerk, London: Bloomsbury Academic. 2019. pp. x + 189. £100 (hbk). ISBN 10/13: 978‐1‐3500‐47341‐1; £31.99 (pbk). ISBN 10/13: 978‐1‐3501‐7717‐8
- Kierkegaard on belief and credence
- The sting of negativity: Irad Kimhi and Michael Della Rocca on the Parmenidean challenge
- Kant on freedom, nature, and judgment: The territory of the third critique, by Kristi Sweet, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. 2023. pp. x + 222. $99.99 (hbk). ISBN: 9781316511121
- Basic equality: A Hegelian resolution
- Stigma: The Shaming Model
- Replies to Wallace, Queloz, and Kirwin
- Ressentiment and power: On Reginster’s The Will to Nothingness
- On the self‐undermining functionality critique of morality
- Nietzsche and “we knowers”: Comments on Reginster’s The Will to Nothingness
- The harm of humiliation
- The architectonic of Foucault’s critique
- Husserl, representationalism, and the theory of phenomenal intentionality
- Is (self‐)reflection a form of intentionality? Sartre’s dilemma
- Transformative grief
- Urgrund and access to the Urgrund in Karoline von Günderrode’s discussion with the thought of Friedrich Schleiermacher
- Mental agency and rational subjectivity
- Descriptive psychology: Franz Brentano’s project today
- The case for rage: Why anger is essential to anti‐racist struggle. By Myisha Cherry. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2021, 203pp. £14.99/$19.95, ISBN 978‐0‐19‐755734‐1
- Bernard Williams, realistic liberalism, and the politics of “normativity”
- The epistemology of groups. By Jennifer Lackey, New York: Oxford University Press. 2021. pp. x + 200. £61.00 (hbk). ISBN: 9780199656608
- Romantic Empiricism: Nature, Art, and Ecology from Herder to Humboldt, by Dalia Nassar. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022, xvii +308 pp. ISBN: 9780190095437; hb: £47.99
- How to commit to commissive self‐knowledge
- Living by her laws: Jacqueline Pascal and women’s autonomy
- On the temporality of the emotions: An essay on grief, anger, and love, by Berislav Marušić. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022. ISBN: 0198851162, £55.00 (Hardcover)
- Merleau‐Ponty’s phenomenology of perception: On the body informed By Timothy D. Mooney. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2022. xx+251 pp. ISBN 9781009223430 hb. $99.99 USD. ISBN 9781009223416 epub
- Paradox and discovery: Iris Murdoch, John Wisdom, and the practice of linguistic philosophy
- Egalitarian sympathies? Adam Smith and Sophie de Grouchy on inequality and social order
- Lydia Goehr, Red Sea, Red Square, Red Thread: A Philosophical Detective Story. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021. 720pp., $45.00 (hbk).
- Consent as an act of commitment
- R. Matthew Shockey, The bounds of self: An essay on Heidegger’s Being and Time. New York, NY: Routledge. 2021. p. 224. £130 (hbk.)
- Nietzsche on the good of cultural change
- Understanding Hegel’s Logic: On Houlgate’s Hegel on Being
- Pragmatist quietism: A meta‐ethical system. By Andrew Sepielli, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. 2022. vi + 231 pp. £55 (Hbk)
- Human nature, history, and the limits of critique
- Value in modernity: The philosophy of existential modernism in Nietzsche, Scheler, Sartre, Musil. By Peter Poellner, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2022. pp. 384. £80 (hbk). ISBN 978‐0‐19‐284973‐1
- Temporal textures: Time, meaning, and the good life
- Brentano’s theory of intentionality
- Freedom and Agency in The Second Sex
- Circumstantial and constitutive moral luck in Kant’s moral philosophy
- Categories by which we try to live
- Acknowledgment or empathy: A critique of Mulhall’s reading of Cavell
- Metaphors and hermeneutical resistance
- Self‐knowledge and the self
- Kant and Animals. By John J. Callanan and Lucy Allais. New York: Oxford University Press, 2020, xii + 258 pp. ISBN: 9780198859918 hb $94.00
- Fanon’s critical humanism: Understanding humanity through its “misfires”
- Kant’s regulative essentialism and the unknowability of real essences
- “Fanon on cadavers, madness, and the damned”
- Fanon, the recovery of African history, and the Nekyia
- Gerhard Krüger’s Platonic critique of Martin Heidegger
- Love and evaluative conflict
- How to dig up minds: The intentional analysis program in cognitive archaeology
- Moral friends? The idea of the moral relationship
- The essence of the mental
- Does Schopenhauer accept any positive pleasures?
- Critical reflections on The Right to Sex: A review essay
- Fichte’s moral philosophy and Kant’s justification of ethics, by Owen Ware. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2020, xv + 244 pp. ISBN‐13: 978‐0‐19‐008659‐6 hb $43.78 and New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2021, xiii + 176 pp. ISBN‐13: 978‐0‐19‐884993‐3 hb $61.02
- Fichte and Hegel on free time
- Nietzsche on the sociality of emotional experience
- The Ascetic Ideal: Genealogies of life‐denial in religion, morality, art, science, and philosophy. Stephen Mulhall. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021, vi+306 pp. ISBN 13:978‐0‐19‐289688‐9 hb £65.00
- Feeling Like It: A Theory of Inclination and Will. Tamar Schapiro. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2021, 192 pp. ISBN‐13:9780198862932 hb £55.00
- No‐self and compassion: Nietzsche and Buddhism
- Nietzsche’s values John Richardson Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020, xvi + 546 pp. ISBN 9780190098230 hb £64; ISBN 9780190098254 epub £53.33
- Being and freedom: On late modern ethics in Europe John Skorupski Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2021, 536 pp. ISBN: 978‐0198716761, £100 Hbk
- From dogmatic slumber to rationalist nightmares: Kant among the dreamers of reason
- Kant on the givenness of space and time
- Murdoch’s ontological argument
- Strawson’s underappreciated argumentative structure
- Practical judgment as reflective judgment: On moral salience and Kantian particularist universalism
- Imagining oneself being someone else
- Reasons for telling
- Epistemically exploitative bullshit: A Sartrean account
- The importance of self‐knowledge for free action
- Explanation and evaluation in Foucault’s genealogy of morality
- On noticing transparent states: A compatibilist approach to transparency
- Two sorts of natural history: On a central concept in critical theory and ethical naturalism
- Hegel and contemporary practical philosophy: Beyond Kantian constructivism, edited by James Gledhill and Sebastian Stein Routledge, 2020. ISBN: 978‐1‐03‐217780‐9, Pbk, £36.99, 392 pp.
- The hammer, the mallet, and the nail
- Is jealousy justifiable?
- The shaken realist: Bernard Williams, the war, and philosophy as cultural critique
- Who cares about winning?
- Theater of lies: The letter to D’Alembert and the tragedy of self‐deception
- Is conferralism descriptively adequate?
- A rule‐based account of the regulative use of reason in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason
- Why it’s OK to speak your mind, Hrishikesh Joshi. Routledge, 2021. ISBN: 9780367141721, Pbk, £18.99, 196 pp.
- Dark matters: Pessimism and the problem of suffering by Mara van der Lugt Princeton University Press, 2021. ISBN: 978‐0‐69‐120662‐2, hbk., $35.00, 472 pp
- Kant’s reform of metaphysics: The Critique of pure reason reconsidered by Karin de Boer Cambridge University Press, 2020. ISBN: 978‐1‐10‐889798‐3, Hbk £75.00, pp. 280
- The world according to Kant: Appearances and things in themselves in critical idealism by Anja Jauernig Oxford University Press, 2021, ISBN 13:978‐0‐19‐969538‐6 hbk £80.00, xiv + 384 pp.
- The Genealogy as a contribution to a natural history of morals
- In search of unity: Twardowski, Husserl, and Ingarden on the unity of the object
- Taking non‐conceptualism back to Dharmakīrti
- The discursive form of human understanding as the source of the transcendental illusion
- Knowing things and going places
- Can there be a feature‐placing language?
- From Rechtsphilosophie to Staatsökonomie: Hegel and the philosophical foundations of political economy
- The Union shall promote social justice
- Kant’s Schematism of the categories: An interpretation and defence
- Daniel Brudney, On Productivity Holism—Final draft
- The method of critical phenomenology: Simone de Beauvoir as a phenomenologist
- Toward the “overthrow of Platonism”: Processist critical social ontology and ameliorative discourse
- Concerning the psychological type of the redeemer: Nietzsche on the methods of philosophy
- Temporal experience as metaphysically lightweight
- Absence experience in grief
- Morality, politics, and contingency
- The moral relevance of social categories: Analysing the case of childhood
- Thought and reality in Marx’s early writings on ancient philosophy
- Kant’s critique of taste: The feeling of life, by Katalin Makkai. Cambridge Cambridge University Press, 2021, ISBN: 9781108497794, pp. viii +209, £75.00, Hbk
- Fichte’s conception of the body: The intertwining of sociality and embodiment
- The radical demand in Løgstrup’s ethics, by Robert Stern. Oxford University Press, 2019, ISBN: 9780198829027, 362+xii pp, $98.00 hbk
- Love: A new understanding of an ancient emotion, by Simon May. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019, 288 pp. hbk. ISBN: 9780190884833
- Hegel: Der philosoph der freiheit, by Klaus Vieweg. München: Verlag C.H. Beck, 2019, 824 pp. ISBN 978‐3‐406‐74235‐4, hb, €34
- The fiery test of critique: A reading of Kant’s dialectic, by Ian Proops. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021, ISBN 13: 9780199656042. 486 pp. hb £80
- Against Nature, by Lorraine Daston. Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press, 2019, ISBN: 9780262537339 86 pp, $13.95 pbk
- Cassirer, by Samantha Matherne. London and New York Routledge, 2021, ix + 286. ISBN 9781138827493 hb £110.00; ISBN 978‐1‐138‐82750‐9 pb £19.99
- John Cook Wilson on the indefinability of knowledge
- The soul‐soother of later antiquity: Nietzsche on Epicurus and Schopenhauer
- A non‐European European Union
- Transcendental idealism as formal idealism
- Rousseau’s silence on trans‐Atlantic slavery: Philosophical implications
- Phenomenology, anti‐realism, and the knowability paradox
- Kant and the determinacy of intuition
- Acquiring reason
- Imputability, answerability, and the epistemic condition on moral and legal culpability
- Freedom‐amelioration, transformative change, and emancipatory orders
- How to theorize about Hope
- Self‐deception and moral interests
- Bolzano’s externalist semantics of natural kind terms
- This other life that knows itself as life: Comments on Karen Ng’s Hegel’s concept of life
- On subjects, objects, and ground: Life as the form of judgment
- Weberian ideal type construction as concept replacement
- Finite freedom: Hegel on the existential function of the state
- The reactive theory of emotions
- Persistent burglars and knocks on doors: Causal indispensability of knowing vindicated
- The hidden lives of objects: Comments on Ng, Hegel’s concept of life
- Life as ground—Variations on a theme: Comments on Karen Ng, Hegel’s concept of life
- The stability of social categories
- Cavell’s inheritance of Luther
- Categories We Live By: Reply to Alcoff, Butler, and Roth
- We are not born submissive: How patriarchy shapes women’s lives, by Manon Garcia. Princeton University Press, 2021. ISBN: 9780691201825, 248 pp, hbk., $27.95
- Modeling the meanings of pictures: Depiction and the philosophy of language, by John Kulvicki. Oxford University Press, 2020, ISBN: 9780198847472, £55.00, hbk. 176 pp.
- Hegel’s value: Justice as the living good, by Dean Moyar. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2021, 384 pp. ISBN: 9780197532553
- Charles Larmore, Morality and metaphysics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021, ISBN: 9781108472340, 230pp, hbk, £75.00.
- From analytic pragmatism to historical materialism: Frankfurt school critical theory and the Quine‐Duhem thesis
- Beyond adaptive preferences: Rethinking women’s complicity in their own subordination
- Why does it matter to individuate the senses: A Brentanian approach
- Singular mental abilities
- Sellars’s ontological nominalism
- A more just union: Euro‐dividend or reinsurance?
- The way it makes us feel: The subsumption model of the Kantian judgement of taste
- The purposes of descriptive psychology
- Contractualism and the question of direction
- Introspective acquaintance: An integration account
- On wandering: Exile, migration and other questions in critical theory
- Once again: On the relationship between morality and ethical life
- Kant on Self‐Knowledge and Self‐Formation: The Nature of Inner Experience Katharina T. Kraus Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020, pp. xiii + 306, ISBN: 9781108836647
- What’s the point of knowledge?: A function‐first epistemology. Michael Hannon. Oxford University Press, 2019, ix+275 pp., ISBN: 9780190914721. $78.00
- Obligations of feeling
- Experiencing the a priori
- A phenomenological argument against instrumentalism
- From surplus fairness to prospect fairness: Why a deeply egalitarian social union is indispensable for a free Europe
- Parmenides’ insight and the possibility of logic
- Why we need descriptive psychology
- Now‐thoughts
- Ingarden on the varieties of dependence
- The EU’s role in income redistribution and insurance: Support, norm‐setter or provider? A review of justice‐based arguments
- The Aristotelian understanding of intellectual vice: Its significance for contemporary vice epistemology
- How to keep up good appearances: Desire, imagination, and the good
- Iris Murdoch, privacy, and the limits of moral testimony
- Hiatus Irrationalis: Lask’s Fateful Misreading of Fichte
- The standard interpretation of Schopenhauer’s compensation argument for pessimism: A nonstandard variant
- Do immortals need an eject button? Sartre and the importance of always having an exit
- Taking metaphysics seriously: Kant on the foundations of ethics
- Innate right in Kant—A critical reading
- Why immanent critique?
- Précis of Brentano’s Philosophical System
- Brentano on phenomenal and transitive consciousness, unconscious consciousness, and phenomenal intentionality
- Kriegel on Brentano on value and fittingness
- Attitudinal evaluation, emotion, and the will
- Brentano on consciousness, intentionality, value, will, and emotion: Reply to symposiasts
- Practical cognition as volition
- Solidarity under duress: Defending state vigilantism
- Perception and self‐awareness in Merleau‐Ponty and Martin
- Self‐deception about truthfulness
- How radical is radical realism?
- Gödelian platonism and mathematical intuition
- Brentano on the individuation of mental acts
- Social sensitivity and the ethics of attention
- Hegel’s metaphysics of nature
- Alasdair MacIntyre, universities, and the common good
- Against modal dualism
- Is perception inadequate? Husserl’s case for non‐sensory objectual phenomenology in perception
- Leibniz and Bolzano on conceptual containment
- Practical irony: Reflections on a theme in the work of Jonathan Lear
- Jacques Rancière’s account of justice
- Ordinary self‐consciousness as philosophical problem
- Quine’s argument “from above”
- Perception as a contentful relation
- Rereading Kant on immortality and the highest good
- The struggle for recognition and the authority of the second person
- Recognition, second‐personal authority, and nonideal theory
- Reply to Darwall
- “You” or “We”: The limits of the second‐person perspective
- Reply to Honneth
- Who gets to play recognitional tag?
- Is Hegelian recognition second‐personal? Hegel says “no”
- Freedom as right
- Recognition and the moral nexus
- The objective stance and the boundary problem
- Moving up without losing your way: The ethical costs of upward mobility, by Jennifer Morton Princeton, NJ: Princeton University press, 2019. 192pp. ISBN: 978‐0691179230, Pbk $17.95
- Who needs a world view?, by Raymond Geuss. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2020. ISBN: 9780674245938. 208p. Hbk. £28.50
- Internalism and externalism in transcendental phenomenology
- “Reason’s sympathy” and others’ ends in Kant
- Freedom, resentment, and the metaphysics of morals, by Pamela Hieronymi. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2020. pp. xx + 145, ISBN: 978‐0691194035, Hbk: $29.95
- Communicating your point of view
- Kant’s transcendental deduction: A cosmology of experience. by Alison Laywine. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. 336pp. ISBN: 9780198748922, Hbk £60.00
- Nietzsche’s ethics, by Thomas Stern. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020. p. 78. ISBN 9781108634113, £15.00 Pbk
- The real problem of pure reason
- Akrasia and moral motivation
- Is Aristotelian friendship disinterested?: Aristotle on loving the other for himself and wishing goods for the other’s sake
- Fear of nature, fear of self, fear of society: Psychic defense mechanisms in Adorno’s theory of culture and experience
- On grief’s sweet sorrow
- Kant on limits, boundaries, and the positive function of ideas
- On the transcendental structure of Iris Murdoch’s philosophical method
- Why did the butler do it?
- Hermann Cohen on the role of history in critical philosophy
- Two irreducible classes of emotional experiences: Affective imaginings and affective perceptions
- The right to the “possibility of acquiring rights”: Cosmopolitan right and migration in Fichte’s doctrine of right
- Moral Psychology with Nietzsche, by Brian Leiter. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019, 224 pp., ISBN: 9780199696505, Hardcover $65.00
- Logical and natural life in Hegel
- Kant is a soft determinist
- Schelling’s Philosophy: Freedom, Nature and Systematicity, edited by G. Anthony Bruno. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020, xii + 252 pp., ISBN 978‐0‐19‐881281‐4, hb £55.00
- Forms of moral impossibility
- Moral blame and rational criticism
- Political realism as reformist conservatism
- Kant, Frege, and the normativity of logic: MacFarlane’s argument for common ground
- No morality, no self: Anscombe’s radical skepticism, by James Doyle. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018, 238 p., ISBN 13: 978‐0‐674‐97650‐4, hbk $41
- The notion of sensation in Sellars’ theory of perception
- Hegel on Second Nature in Ethical Life, by Andreja Novakovic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017, ISBN 9781316809723, $103.99 Hbk
- Civilization and the culture of science: Science and the shaping of modernity, 1795–1935, by Stephen Gaukroger. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2020, 544 pp., ISBN: 978‐0‐19‐884907‐0, $50.00
- The Habermas‐Rawls debate, by James Gordon Finlayson. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2019, xi + 294pp., ISBN 13: 978‐0‐231‐16410‐8 hb, ISBN 13: 978‐0‐231‐16411‐5 pb, $105.00 hb/$35.00 pb
- Spinoza on learning to live together, by Susan James. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020, Pp. viii + 228, ISBN: 9780198713074, $70.00 Hbk
- Retrieving Heidegger’s temporal realism
- Dynamis and Energeia in Aristotle’s Metaphysics
- Spatial music
- Anger and its desires
- Husserl on rationality
- How to make do with events
- Frightening times
- Perfectionism and dignity
- The spontaneity of emotion
- On stipulation
- Rousseau’s theory of value and the case of women
- Infeasibility as a normative argument‐stopper: The case of open borders
- Intra‐mental or intra‐cranial? On Brentano’s concept of immanent object
- Intra‐mental or intra‐cranial? On Brentano’s concept of immanent object
- Intra‐mental or intra‐cranial? On Brentano’s concept of immanent object
- Herder’s Philosophy, by Michael Forster. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2018, xii + 352 pp.
- Hegel’s aesthetics: The art of idealism, Lydia L. Moland, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019. 296 pages. ISBN: 9780190847326. Hb £47.99
- Performatives Selbstbewusstsein, Stefan Lang Paderborn: Mentis Verlag, 2019, 275 pp. ISBN 978‐3‐95743‐168‐4 pb €54.00
- Thinking and the I: Hegel and the Critique of Kant, Alfredo Ferrarin Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2019, xv + 233 pp. ISBN 10: 0‐810‐13939‐1 hb £109.00; ISBN 10: 0‐810‐13938‐3 pb £37.95
- Hegel’s aesthetics: The art of idealism, Lydia L. Moland, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019. 296 pages. ISBN: 9780190847326. Hb £47.99
- Moral knowledge. Sarah McGrath. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019, × + 218 pp., £50 Hbk
- Herder’s Philosophy, by Michael Forster. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2018, xii + 352 pp.
- Herder’s Philosophy, by Michael Forster. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2018, xii + 352 pp.
- Hegel’s aesthetics: The art of idealism, Lydia L. Moland, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019. 296 pages. ISBN: 9780190847326. Hb £47.99
- Husserl on the overlap of pure and empirical concepts
- Bergson on Kant and the freedom of the moi en général
- A system of rational faculties: Additive or transformative?
- Compression: Nietzsche, Williams, and the problem of style
- Nietzsche, Spinoza, and Etiology (On the Example of Free Will)
- Thomas Aquinas and the complex simplicity of the rational soul
- An institutional right of refugee return
- Justification and emancipation: The critical theory of rainer forst. Edited by Amy Allen and Eduardo Mendieta. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2019, viii+200 pp. ISBN: 978‐0‐271‐08478‐7 pb £20.99
- The pursuit of an authentic philosophy: Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and the everyday. David Egan. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019. 272 pp. ISBN: 9780198832638, hb £55.00.
- Fichte’s ethics. MichelleKosch. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2018. 208 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐19‐880966‐1. $57.00
- Being inclined: Félix Ravaisson’s philosophy of habit. MarkSinclair. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019. 256 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐19‐880966‐1. $57.00
- Shameful self‐consciousness
- Kant on laws. Eric Watkins. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019, xv + 297 pp. ISBN: 978‐1‐107‐16391‐1 hb £75.00
- The virtue of error: Solved games and ethical deliberation
- The fragmentation of being. Kris McDaniel. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2017, 334 pp., ISBN: 9780198719656, £53.00 hb
- Novalis’s philosophical fictions: Love, reason, and the given from the Fichte‐Studies to the Hymns to the Night
- Fichte’s ethics. MichelleKosch. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2018. 208 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐19‐880966‐1. $57.00
- Kant’s conception of freedom: A developmental and critical analysis. Henry E. Allison. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2020, xxiii +531 pp. ISBN: 978‐1‐107‐14511‐5 hb $140.00
- Being inclined: Félix Ravaisson’s philosophy of habit. MarkSinclair. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019. 256 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐19‐880966‐1. $57.00
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- Gadamer’s Phenomenological Ethics
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- One more time on the alleged repugnance of Kant’s ethics? Schiller’s Kallias letters and the entirety of the human being
- A priori intuition and transcendental necessity in Kant’s idealism
- On the function of self‐deception
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- Kant’s a priori history of metaphysics: Systematicity, progress, and the ends of reason
- Heidegger on Aristotelian phronêsis and moral justification
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- Left Wittgensteinianism
- Wolff on duties of esteem in the law of peoples
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- Condillac on being human: Language and reflection reconsidered
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- Kant’s conception of freedom. A developmental and critical analysis. Henry E. Allison. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2020, xxiii +531 pp. ISBN: 978‐1‐107‐14511‐5 hb $140.00
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- Humour in Nietzsche’s style
- Astell, friendship, and relational autonomy
- Analysing hope: The live possibility account
- Heautonomy: Schiller on freedom of the will
- Political vandalism as counter‐speech: A defense of defacing and destroying tainted monuments
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- Ryle on knowing how: Some clarifications and corrections
- What is philosophy as a way of life? Why philosophy as a way of life?
- Idealism and illusions
- Nature, corruption, and freedom: Stoic ethics in Kant’s Religion
- Whence ‘honeste vive’?
- Existential flourishing: A phenomenology of the virtues, by Irene McMullin. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2019, 254 pp. ISBN: 9781108471664 hb $ 105.00
- Kant on the sources of metaphysics: The dialectic of pure reason, by Marcus Willaschek. Cambridge University Press, 2018, 298pp. $105.00 (hbk), ISBN 9781108472630
- How to be trustworthy, by Katherine Hawley Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019, vii + 151 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐19‐884390‐0
- Herder’s naturalist aesthetics, by Rachel Zuckert. Cambridge University Press, 2019, xii + 266 pp. ISBN 9781108672580 hb £75
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- Responsibility and appropriate blame: The no difference view
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- P. F. Strawson was neither an externalist nor an internalist about moral responsibility
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- The normative bond between Kantian autonomy and Sartrean authenticity: A critical existentialist perspective
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- On religious and cultural objects: Articulate and inarticulate bodies in Spinoza’s philosophy of nature
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- Fellow Creatures, by Christine Korsgaard. Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN 0198753853. 272 pp. $24.95
- Critique as social practice: Critical theory and social self‐understanding by Robin Celikates, translated by Naomi van Steebergen Rowman & Littlefield [Essex Studies in Contemporary Critical Theory], 2018, 223 pp. ISBN: 9781786604637 Pbk. £24.95
- Analysis and transcendence in The Sovereignty of Good
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- The role of imagination in cognition: On Horstmann’s expansive reading of Kant. Kant’s Power of Imagination, by Rolf‐Peter Horstmann. Cambridge University Press, 2018, 110pp. ISBN: 978‐1108464031 £15.00
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- Kant on moral self‐opacity
- Frege on the generality of logical laws
- On the putative possibility of non‐spatio‐temporal forms of sensibility in Kant
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- Socratic reductionism in ethics
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- Demanding more of Strawsonian accountability theory
- The struggle for recognition of what?
- Heidegger on Guilt: Reconstructing the Transcendental Argument in Being and Time
- Novalis’s philosophical fictions: Love, reason, and the given from the Fichte‐Studies to the Hymns to the Night
- On the causal role of privation in Thomas Aquinas’s metaphysics
- Rethinking Kant’s distinction between the beauty of art and the beauty of nature
- Ontological difference, anthropological difference, and equal liberty
- Valuing animals as they are—Whether they feel it or not
- Wittgenstein and the unity of good
- Discovering the virtue of hope
- Evans, transparency, and Cartesianism
- Hobbes’s genealogy of private conscience
- Anna Elisabetta Galeotti Political self‐deception Cambridge University Press, 2018. ISBN: 9781108529242. 269 pp. £75.00 Candice Delmas A duty to resist: When disobedience should be uncivil. Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN: 9780190872199. 312 pp. £19.99
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- Heidegger and the genesis of social ontology: Mitwelt, Mitsein, and the problem of other people
- Two conceptions of voluntary action in the Nicomachean Ethics
- Democratic dictatorship: Political legitimacy in Marxist perspective
- Jean‐François Kervégan, The actual and the rational: Hegel and objective spirit^ ISBN: 978‐0‐2260‐2380‐9 (hbk), Chicago, IL: Chicago University Press, 2018
- Locke on the role of judgment in perception
- Foucault’s concept of illegalism
- Towards a phenomenology of grief: Insights from Merleau‐Ponty
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- Angela A. MendeloviciTHE PHENOMENAL BASIS OF INTENTIONALITY. Oxford University Press, 2018. 296 pages. ISBN:9780190863807
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- R. Jay Wallace The Moral Nexus. Princeton University Press, 2019. ISBN 9780691172170. 329 pp. £34.00
- Spinning strands into aspects: Realism, idealism, and finite modes in Spinoza
- Wild chimeras: Enthusiasm and intellectual virtue in Kant
- The Exchange of Words: Replies to critics
- Aspiration: The Agency of Becoming by Agnes Callard. New York: Oxford University Press, 2018, xiii + 287 pp. ISBN 9780190639488 hb
- Kant, God and Metaphysics: The Secret Thorn, by Edward Kanterian. Routledge, 2017, xvii + 444 pp. ISBN 10/13: 9781138908581 hb £110; ISBN 10/13: 9780203729588 eBook £35.99
- Thinking and being by Irad Kimhi Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018, Hbk. $39.95, 176pp. ISBN 978‐0‐674‐96789‐2
- Illocution, Expression, and Self‐Consciousness
- “Believing the speaker” versus believing on evidence: A critique of Moran
- Expression and transaction in illocutionary acts
- Against the Moral Powers Test of basic liberty
- Adam Smith and the Stoic principle of suicide
- Can power be self‐legitimating? Political realism in Hobbes, Weber, and Williams
- An Adam Smithian account of moral reasons
- Expanding transformative experience
- The Importance of Being Rational by Errol Lord. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018, xv + 253 pp. ISBN: 9780198815099
- Reconstructing Schopenhauer’s ethics: Hope, compassion, and animal welfare, By Sandra Shapshay. New York: Oxford University Press, 2019, Hbk., £47.99, ISBN 978‐0‐19‐090680‐1.
- Reconstructing Schopenhauer’s ethics: Hope, compassion, and animal welfare, By Sandra Shapshay. New York: Oxford University Press, 2019, Hbk., £47.99, ISBN 978‐0‐19‐090680‐1.
- Trust, anger, resentment, forgiveness: On blame and its reasons
- Hume’s emotivist theory of moral judgements
- The attitudinal view and the integration of the particular object of emotions
- Diachronic agency and practical entitlement
- Wittgensteinian content‐externalism
- The epistemic limits of shared reasons
- A mereological argument for the non‐spatiotemporality of things in themselves
- The nature and rationality of conversion
- Negative freedom or integrated domination? Adorno versus Honneth
- The philosopher and the reader: Kierkegaard and Wittgenstein on love and philosophical method
- Helvétius’s challenge: Moral luck, political constitutions, and the economy of esteem
- Helvétius’s challenge: Moral luck, political constitutions, and the economy of esteem
- Neurath on Verstehen
- After Heidegger? G. Fried and R. Polt (eds.), London: Rowman & Litlefield, 2018, £90.00 hbk., ISBN: 1786604868, 392pp Heidegger on Technology A. J. Wendland, C. Merwin and C. Hadjioannou (eds.), New York: Routledge, 2019, £120 hbk., ISBN: 1138674613, 360pp.
- Herder’s hermeneutics: History, poetry, enlightenment by Kristin Gjesdal. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), xiv + 231 pp., $99.99 cloth, ISBN: 9781316285770
- After Heidegger? G. Fried and R. Polt (eds.), London: Rowman & Litlefield, 2018, £90.00 hbk., ISBN: 1786604868, 392pp Heidegger on Technology A. J. Wendland, C. Merwin and C. Hadjioannou (eds.), New York: Routledge, 2019, £120 hbk., ISBN: 1138674613, 360pp.
- Marx’s genealogy of the idea of equality
- Kant on Reflection and Virtue Melissa Merritt, (Cambridge: University Press, 2018, 234pp ISBN: 9781108344005, £75.00 hbk
- Kantian constructivism and the Reinhold–Sidgwick objection
- Must naive realists be relationalists?
- Herder’s hermeneutics: History, poetry, enlightenment by Kristin Gjesdal. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), xiv + 231 pp., $99.99 cloth, ISBN: 9781316285770
- Transparency and self‐knowledge, by Alex Byrne. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018, xi + 227 pp. ISBN: 9780198821618. hb £30.00
- A Kantian solution to the problem of imperceptible differences
- Real Hallucinations: Psychiatric Illness, Intentionality, and the Interpersonal World, Matthew Ratcliffe. London, England: The MIT Press, 2017, ix + 290 pp. ISBN: 9780262036719 hb £30.00
- Kant and the demandingness of the virtue of beneficence
- Phenomenological reduction in Merleau‐Ponty’s The Structure of Behavior: An alternative approach to the naturalization of phenomenology
- Phenomenological reduction in Merleau‐Ponty’s The Structure of Behavior: An alternative approach to the naturalization of phenomenology
- The varieties of agential powers
- “I am NN”: A Reconstruction of Anscombe’s “The First Person”
- “I am NN”: A Reconstruction of Anscombe’s “The First Person”
- Habit as resistance: Bergson’s philosophy of second nature
- Hegel’s real habits
- The puzzle of philosophical testimony
- Speaking of Oneself and Speaking of One’s Self
- The mind’s “I”
- Testimony, epistemic egoism, and epistemic credit
- “Practical reason is not the will”: Kant and Reinhold’s dilemma
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- Akrasia, practical reason, and the diversity of motivation: A new defense of tripartition
- The aesthetic as mirror of faith in Kierkegaard’s Fear and Trembling
- Wittgenstein, mindreading and perception
- Property and economic planning in Fichte’s contractualism
- Minima sensibilia: Against the dynamic snapshot model of temporal experience
- My body and other objects: The internal limits of self‐ownership
- Down girl: The logic of misogyny by Kate Manne. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, xxiv +338 pp. Hardcover ISBN‐13:978–0–19‐060498‐1 hb $27.95
- Moral motivation in early 18th century moral rationalism
- The Value of Rationality by Ralph Wedgwood. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, 288 pp. ISBN: 9780198802693 Hbk £30.00
- The Subject of Experience by Galen Strawson. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, 336pp. ISBN: 9780198777885 Hbk. £35.00
- Foucault’s neoliberal ideology
- Husserl’s Legacy: Phenomenology, Metaphysics, & Transcendental Philosophy by Dan Zahavi. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. 2017, 256 pp. ISBN: 9780199684830. Hbk £30.00
- Self‐Consciousness and Objectivity: An Introduction to Absolute Idealism, by Sebastian Rödl. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018, 194 pp. ISBN: 9780674976511 hb $45
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- On Bauer’s How to Do things with Pornography
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- Idleness: A Philosophical Essay, Edited by Brian O’Connor, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2018, 216 pp. ISBN 9780691167527 hb £20.00
- Nietzsche’s Search for Philosophy: On the Middle Writings, by Keith Ansell‐Pearson. London: Bloomsbury, 2018, 208 pp. ISBN: 9781474254694 hb £65.00; ISBN: 9781474254717 pb £21.99
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- From humility to envy: Questioning the usefulness of sad passions as a means towards virtue in Spinoza’s Ethics
- On the need for real dialogue: What’s wrong with monological contractualism?
- Idleness: A Philosophical Essay, Edited by Brian O’Connor, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2018, 216 pp. ISBN 9780691167527 hb £20.00
- Skillful coping: Essays on the phenomenology of everyday perception and action, by Hubert L. Dreyfus, edited by Mark A. Wrathall. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014, 289 pp. ISBN: 978‐0‐19‐965470‐3, £35.00 and Background practices: Essays on the understanding of being, by Hubert L. Dreyfus, edited by Mark A. Wrathall. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, 258 pp. ISBN: 978‐0‐19‐879622‐0, £30.00
- Being and Nothingness by Jean‐Paul Sartre, translated by Sarah Richmond. London: Routledge, 2018, 848 pp. ISBN: 9780415529112 hb £45.00
- Reason unbound: Kant’s theory of regulative principles
- Nietzsche’s Search for Philosophy: On the Middle Writings, by Keith Ansell‐Pearson. London: Bloomsbury, 2018, 208 pp. ISBN: 9781474254694 hb £65.00; ISBN: 9781474254717 pb £21.99
- Spinoza on Reason, by Michael LeBuffe. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018, xv + 217 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐19‐084580‐3, hb $73.42
- Forcing materialism upon metaphysics: Three approaches to Adorno’s method
- Kant on the bounds of promise making: A Mendelssohnian account
- What is a fourdimensionalist to do about temporally extended properties?
- Scaffolding agency: A proleptic account of the reactive attitudes
- Does intention involve belief?
- Visual field and empty space
- On the nature and systematic role of evidence: Husserl as a proponent of mentalist evidentialism?
- Subjectivism, instrumentalism, and prudentialism about reasons: On the normativity of instrumental transmission
- Populism and democracy: The challenge for deliberative democracy
- Real predicates and existential judgements
- Real possibility and relation to an object. Remarks on Kant’s Modal Metaphysics
- The origins and “possibility” of concepts in Wolff and Kant: Comments on Nicholas Stang, Kant’s Modal Metaphysics
- Toward a specification of Kant’s concept(s) of existence
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- Aesthetic freedom and democratic ethical life: A Hegelian account of the relationship between aesthetics and democratic politics
- The difficulty of reality and a revolt against mourning
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- The Rationality of Perception, by Susanna Siegel. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, xxv + 221 pp. ISBN 978‐0‐19‐879708‐1 hb £35.00
- Emergenza, by Maurizio Ferraris. Torino: Einaudi, 2016, 144 pp. ISBN 9788806228026 €12.00
- Adorno and existence by Peter E. Gordon. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016, 272 pp. ISBN 9780674734784 hb £21.95.
- Perception as a Rational CapacitySources of knowledge: On the concept of a rational capacity for knowledge, by Andrea Kern, translated by Daniel Smyth. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017, 304 pp. ISBN 13: 9780674416116 hb £25.95
- Die Philosophie des Marktes/The Philosophy of the Market, by Hans‐Christoph Schmidt am Busch. Hamburg: Meiner, 2016, 328 pp. ISBN 10/13: 978‐3‐7873‐3012‐6 pb €68
- The philosophical imagination: Selected essays by Richard Moran. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, xvi + 326 pp. ISBN: 9780190633776 £47.99
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- Recognition and personhood: A critique of Bernstein’s account of the wrongfulness of torture
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- Critique of Aryeh Kosman, The Activity of Being: An Essay on Aristotle’s Ontology
- Activity, actuality, and analogy: Comments on Aryeh Kosman, The Activity of Being: An Essay on Aristotle’s Ontology
- Comments on Aryeh Kosman’s The Activity of Being: An Essay on Aristotle’s Ontology
- The Activity of Being: A reply to my critics, Mary Louise Gill, Jonathan Beere, and David Charles
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- CORRIGENDUM
- Rousseau’s Critique of Inequality: Reconstructing the Second Discourse, by Frederick Neuhouser. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014, xi +236 pp. ISBN Paperback 978‐1‐107‐64466‐3
- The Epistemic Life of Groups, Michael Brady and Miranda Fricker. Oxford: Oxford University Press (eds.) 2016, vi + 255 pp ISBN 978–0–19‐875964‐5, £45.00
- L’art et le désir de Dieu. Une enquête philosophique, by Roger Pouivet. Rennes, France: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2017, 219 pp. ISBN 978‐2‐7535‐5386‐6; ISSN 1761‐8304pb €20
- Fichte’s Ethical Thought, by Allen Wood. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, 352 pp. ISBN 9780198766889 hb £30.00
- Genuine belief and genuine doubt in Peirce
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- Structural causality in Spinoza’s Ethics
- Analysing political deception: The virtues of Bernard Williams’ anti‐tyranny argument
- Truth and epistemic value
- Analysing political deception: The virtues of Bernard Williams’ anti‐tyranny argument
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- Nietzsche on guilt: Dependency, debt, and imperfection
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- You meta believe it
- Konrad Morgen: The Conscience of a Nazi Judge, by Herlinde Pauer-Studer and J. David Velleman, Basingstoke, UK/New York: Palgrave Macmillan 2015, XXIV + 190 pp. ISBN 978-1-137-49694-2. hb. $32.00
- Ancient Wisdom in the age of the new science: Histories of philosophy in England, c. 1640–1700. by Dmitri Levitin. Oxford University Press, 2015, xii + 670 ISBN: 9781107513747. pbk. £26.99
- On What Matters, Volume III, by Derek Parfit. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017, xiv + 468 pp. ISBN 9780198778608. hb. £25.00
- The Afterlife of Idealism: The Impact of New Idealism on British Historical and Political Thought, 1945–1980, by Admir Skodo. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016, vi + 301 pp. ISBN-10: 3319293842 hb £74.50
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- Does History Make Sense? Hegel on the Historical Shapes of Justice, by Terry Pinkard. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017, 272 pp. ISBN 13: 978-0-674-97177-6 hb £39.95
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- Reticence
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- Irony and idealism: Rereading Schlegel, Hegel, and Kierkegaard, by Fred Rush. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, xvi + 312 pp. ISBN 13:978–0–19-968822-7 hb £50.00
- Is there an emancipatory interest? An attempt to answer critical theory’s most fundamental question
- L’Expérience esthétique, by Jean-Marie Schaeffer. Paris, Gallimard, coll. « NRF Essais », 2015, 366 pp. ISBN: 978-2-07-039980-2. 20€
- Feminist Experiences: Foucauldian and Phenomenological Investigations, by Johanna Oksala Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2016, 189 pp. ISBN 9780810132405
- Socratic inquiry and the “What-is-F?” question
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- Fichte’s Creuzer review and the transformation of the free will problem
- Kant’s principles of modality
- Kant on intuitive understanding and things in themselves
- Modesty as an excellence in moral perspective taking
- Reading from the middle: Heidegger and the narrative self
- Containment and ‘rational health’: Moran and psychoanalysis
- The Free Development of Each: Studies on Freedom, Right, and Ethics in Classical German Philosophy, by Allen W. Wood. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014, xiii + 330 pp. ISBN: 978-0-19-968553-0 hb £45.00
- Heidegger on concepts, freedom, and normativity, by Sacha Golob. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014, xvii + 272 pp. ISBN 13: 978–1107031708 hb £62.00; ISBN 13: 978–1316631904 pb £23.99
- Thinking about cases: Applying Kant’s universal law formula
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- Critique and resistance: Ethical, social-theoretical, political? On Fabian Freyenhagen’s Adorno’s Practical Philosophy
- Comments on Fabian Freyenhagen, Adorno’s Practical Philosophy
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- “On Kantians and Pragmatists” Review article on Kenneth Baynes, Habermas. (The Routledge Philosophers). Kenneth Baynes. New York: Routledge, 2016, xv + 255 pp. ISBN: 978-0415773256
- The Minority Body: A Theory of Disability, Elizabeth Barnes. New York: Oxford University Press, 2016, xii + 200 pp. ISBN 10/13: 978–0198732587 hb £21.25.
- Marx on the compatibility of freedom and necessity: A reply to David James
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- On friendship, by Alexander Nehamas. New York, NY: Basic Books, 2016, viii + 394 pp. ISBN 978-0465-08292-6 hb $26.99
- Cornell Realism, Explanation, and Natural Properties
- The Given: Experience and Its Content, Michelle Montague. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, xii + 250 pp. ISBN 13: 978-0-19-874890-8 hb £35.00; also available as eBook.
- Justice without Solidarity? Collective Identity and the Fate of the ‘Ethical’ in Habermas’ Recent Political Theory
- The Location of Kant’s Refutation of Idealism
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- Weighing Reasons, edited by Errol Lord and Barry Maguire. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, xi + 301pp. ISBN: 9780199315192, hb £34.99
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- Beholdenness to Entities and the Concept of ‘Dasein’: Phenomenology, Ontology and Idealism in the early Heidegger
- Forms not Norms! On Haugeland on Heidegger on Being
- Kritik von Lebensformen, by Rahel Jaeggi. Frankfurt a.M.: Suhrkamp Verlag, 2014, 451 pp. ISBN 978-3-518-29587-8 €20.00
- Kant’s Transcendental Deduction: An Analytical-Historical Commentary, by Henry Allison. Oxford University Press, 2015, 496 pp. ISBN 13: 978-0-19-872485-8 hb £75.00
- Haugeland’s Heidegger and the Metaphysics of Normativity
- Autonomy and Mental Disorder, edited by Lubomira Radoilska. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012, xli + 285 pp. ISBN 978-0-19-959542-6 pb £41.99.
- ‘The Extremely Difficult Realization That Something Other Than Oneself Is Real’: Iris Murdoch on Love and Moral Agency
- Looking for laws in all the wrong spaces: Kant on laws, the understanding, and space
- Heidegger on Being Uncanny, by Katherine Withy. Cambridge, MA & London: Harvard University Press, 2015, vi + 250 pp. ISBN Hardback 978-0-674-41670-3 $45.00
- What Is Left of the Active Externalism Debate?
- ‘As One Does’: Understanding Heidegger’s Account of das Man
- Proper-Function Moral Realism
- Relationships as Indirect Intensifiers: Solving the Puzzle of Partiality
- Propositional Attitudes and Embodied Skills in the Philosophy of Action
- The Explanatory Challenge: Moral Realism Is No Better Than Theism
- Justification, Attachments and Regret
- Hegel on Kant’s Analytic–Synthetic Distinction
- Hegel’s Theory of Responsibility, by Mark Alznauer. Cambridge: Cambridge University press, 2015, x + 218 pp. ISBN: 978-1-10-707812-3 hb £60.00
- Embodied Expression: The Role of the Lived Body in Husserl’s Notion of Intention Fulfilment
- The View From Here: On Affirmation, Attachment, and the Limits of Regret, by R. Jay Wallace. Oxford University Press, 2013, 288 pp. ISBN: 978-0-19-994135-3 hb £30.49
- The Problem of Relevant Descriptions and the Scope of Moral Principles
- How Transparent is Disgust?
- Conceptual Analysis and Analytical Definitions in Frege
- Wittgensteinian Accounts of Religious Belief: Noncognitivist, Juicer, and Atheist-Minus
- How Kant Justifies Freedom of Agency (without Transcendental Idealism)
- The Ontology of Musical Works and the Role of Intuitions: An Experimental Study
- Aesthetic Properties as Powers
- Two Puzzles Concerning Spinoza’s Conception of Belief
- Hegel on Beauty, by Julia Peters. New York, NY: Routledge, 2015, 161 pp. ISBN 978-1-138-79595-2 hb $145.00
- Hobbes on Teleology and Reason
- Is There Something in Common? Forms and the Theory of Word Meaning
- The Epistemological Problem of Other Minds and the Knowledge Asymmetry
- Two Second-Personal Conceptions of the Dignity of Persons
- ‘Pain Always Asks for a Cause’: Nietzsche and Explanation
- Recent Scholarship on Hume’s Theory of Mental Representation
- Camus on Authenticity in Political Violence
- The Free Harmony of the Faculties and the Primacy of Imagination in Kant’s Aesthetic Judgment
- Consciousness and Hegel’s Solution to the Problem of the Criterion
- Kant and the Normativity of Logic
- Moral Luck and the Possibility of Agential Disjunctivism
- Putting Liberty in its Place: Rawlsian Liberalism without the Liberalism
- Adorno’s Aristotle Critique and Ethical Naturalism
- Perceptual Experience and Cognitive Penetrability
- Weltschmerz: Pessimism in German Philosophy, 1860–1900, by Frederick C. Beiser. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, ix+301 pp. ISBN 10/13:978-0-19-876871-5 hb £40.00
- Heidegger, Art, and the Overcoming of Metaphysics
- Rule-Following and Rule-Breaking: Kierkegaard and Wittgenstein
- Concealing and Concealment in Heidegger
- Nietzsche on Mind and Nature, edited by Manuel Dries and P. J. E. Kail. Oxford University Press, 2015, 256 pp. ISBN 13: 978-0-19-872223-6 hb £40.00
- Schopenhauer on the Rights of Animals
- From Empiricism to Expressivism, by Robert Brandom. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015, 289pp. ISBN 978-0-67-418728-3 hb £25.95
- Realizing the Good: Hegel’s Critique of Kantian Morality
- The Double Intentionality of Emotional Experience
- Reading Rousseau’s Second Discourse in the Light of the Question: What is the Source of Social Inequality?
- The Compatibility of Freedom and Necessity in Marx’s Idea of Communist Society
- Object-Dependent Thought Without Illusion
- Action and Variation in Perception
- What is it to Depsychologize Psychology?
- Wittgenstein, Theories of Meaning, and Linguistic Disjunctivism
- Cryptonormative Judgments
- Kant on Impenetrability, Touch, and the Causal Content of Perception
- The Moral Insignificance of Self-consciousness
- What Do We See When We See Total Darkness?
- Conceptual Role Semantics and the Reference of Moral Concepts
- Action as the Conclusion of Practical Reasoning; The Critique of a Rödlian Account
- Evidence and Religious Belief, Edited by Kelly James Clark and Raymond J. VanArragon. Oxford: Oxford University Press, ix + 214 pp. ISBN 13: 978-0-19-960371-8 hb £36; Also Available as eBook.
- Believing In Twin Earth: New Evidence for the Normativity of Belief
- Aims and Exclusivity
- Kant’s Criticism of Common Moral Rational Cognition
- Williams and the Desirability of Body-Bound Immortality Revisited
- Intentionality, Constitution and Merleau-Ponty’s Concept of ‘The Flesh’
- The Sound of Silence: Merleau-Ponty on Conscious Thought
- Understanding the Immediacy of Other Minds
- Action, Knowledge, and Will, by John Hyman. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2015, xi + 255 pp. ISBN 13:978-0-19-873577-9 hb £35.00
- Why Should We Care About Nietzsche’s ‘Higher Men’?
- Synthetic Evidence and Objective Identity: The Contemporary Significance of Early Husserl’s Conception of Truth
- An Agency-Based Capability Theory of Justice
- The Representation of an Action: Tragedy between Kant and Hegel
- Dissociative Identity Disorder, Ambivalence, and Responsibility
- Theorising from the Global Standpoint: Kant and Grotius on Original Common Possession of the Earth
- Persons and Properties: A Sartrean Perspective on Love’s Object
- A Comedy We Believe In: A Further Look at Sartre’s Theory of Emotions
- Realism, Utopianism, and Radical Values
- Hybrid Speech Acts: A Theory of Normative Thought and Language That ‘Has It Both Ways’
- Beyond the Myth of the Nietzschean Ideal-Type
- In Defense of a Democratic Productivist Welfare State
- In Defense of Trait-Based Love
- Discriminatory Capacities, Russell’s Principle, and the Importance of Losing Sight of Objects
- Basic Self-Awareness
- Propositional Content, by Peter Hanks. Oxford University Press, 2015, x + 227 pp. ISBN 978-0-19-968489-2 hb £30.00
- A Public no Demos: What Supranational Democratic Legitimacy (in the EU and Elsewhere) Requires
- The Metaphysics of Degrees
- Enkratic Agency
- Kant, Neo-Kantians, and Transcendental Subjectivity
- Heidegger on Human Finitude: Beginning at the End
- Kierkegaard on Impartiality and Love
- What It’s Like To Have a Cognitive Home
- Nietzsche, Nature, Nurture
- Joint Action and the Expression of Shared Intentions: An Expanded Taylorian Account
- A Capacity to Get Things Right: Gilbert Ryle on Knowledge
- Motivational Indeterminacy
- Science, Realism and Correlationism. A Phenomenological Critique of Meillassoux’ Argument from Ancestrality