Philosophy bites again

Book - 2014

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Subjects
Published
New York : Oxford University Press 2014.
Language
English
Other Authors
David Edmonds, 1964- (Interviewer), Nigel Warburton, 1962-
Edition
1st ed
Item Description
"New - 27 leading thinkers on 27 intriguing topics"--Cover.
Physical Description
xxiii, 296 p. ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 289-296).
ISBN
9780198702696
  • The most impressive philosopher I've met...
  • Joy and Pain
  • 1. Thomas Hurka on Pleasure
  • 2. Michael Tye on Pain
  • 3. Noël Carroll on Humour
  • Morality
  • 4. Jeff McMahan on Moral Status
  • 5. John Mikhail on Universal Moral Grammar
  • 6. Raimond Gaita on Torture
  • 7. Gary L. Francione on Animal Abolitionism
  • Mind, Self, and Imagination
  • 8. Ned Block on Consciousness
  • 9. Patricia Churchland on Eliminative Materialism
  • 10. Frank Jackson on What Mary Knew
  • 11. Galen Strawson on the Sense of Self
  • 12. Alison Gopnik on the Imagination
  • Free Will, Responsibility, and Punishment
  • 13. Daniel Dennett on Free Will Worth Wanting
  • 14. Fiery Cushman on Moral Luck
  • 15. Nicola Lacey on Criminal Responsibility
  • 16. Victor Tadros on Punishment
  • 17. Philip Pettit on Group Agency
  • Politics
  • 18. Susan Mendus on Toleration
  • 19. Hillel Steiner on Exploitation
  • 20. Rae Langton on Hate Speech
  • 21. Nancy Fraser on Recognition
  • 22. C. A. J. Coady on Dirty Hands in Politics
  • Metaphysics, Meaning, and Reason
  • 23. Kit Fine on What is Metaphysics?
  • 24. Dan Sperber on the Enigma of Reason
  • 25. Stephen Neale on Meaning and Interpretation
  • 26. Susan Wolf on Meaning in Life
  • 27. Samuel Schemer on the Afterlife
  • Notes on Contributors
  • Further Reading
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This third collection of conversations from Edmonds and Warburton's popular "Philosophy Bites" podcast is a testament to the vivacity and draw of contemporary philosophy. The book is composed of 27 lively, thematic interviews with contemporary scholars from around the globe, providing an entry point for those interested in the philosophical implications of such eclectic issues as pain, free will, punishment, and a meaningful life. Each brief conversation pithily summarizes its respective thinkers' positions, relieving readers of the onerous and daunting task of reading titanic and abstruse tomes. Yet this virtue comes with an implicit drawback. We get the rough synopsis of 500 pages of thought rendering philosophy accessible, entertaining, and easily ingested, but perhaps something essential is lost by avoiding the more unwieldy intricacies of an extensive argument. Still, this book provides the insight and the terms used by today's living philosophers to treat issues that are pertinent to every individual, including such questions as "How do we determine who qualifies as a human being?" or "Is torture ever just?" Through deep exploration of these issues, philosophy becomes less esoteric and more closely tied to analyzing the unexamined premises that imbue our everyday life, ideas, and decisions with meaning. (Dec.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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