The Philosophical Review

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The Philosophical Review

Area of ​​Expertise philosophy
language English
publishing company Duke University Press (USA)
First edition 1892
Frequency of publication four times per year
Web link Homepage
JSTOR
ISSN

The Philosophical Review is a quarterly magazine for philosophy , by the faculty of the Sage School of Philosophy of Cornell University is issued and published by Duke University Press since September of 2006. Works from all areas of analytical philosophy are published, but special attention is paid to works that are of general interest to academic philosophers. Each issue contains roughly two to four essays.

The magazine has been published without interruption since 1892. The first edition contained essays by William James and John Dewey .

Well-known essays

  • Quine, Willard van Orman (January 1951), Two Dogmas of Empiricism
  • Rawls, John (January 1955), Two Concepts of Rules
  • Grice, HP (July 1957), Meaning
  • Vendler, Zeno (April 1957), Verbs and Times
  • Smart, JJC (April 1959), Sensations and Brain Processes
  • Harman, Gilbert (January 1965), The Inference to the Best Explanation
  • Donnellan, Keith S. (July 1966), Reference and Definite Descriptions
  • Grice, HP (April 1969), Utterer's Meaning and Intention
  • Nagel, Thomas (October 1974), What Is It Like to Be a Bat?
  • Lewis, David (July 1976), Probabilities of Conditionals and Conditional Probabilities
  • Burge, Tyler (Jan 1986), Individualism and Psychology
  • DeRose, Keith (Jan 1995), Solving the Skeptical Problem

See also

Web links