81.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Thomas Peard
WORLD HUNGER AND THE MORAL REQUIREMENTS OF SELF-SACRIFICE
|
|
|
82.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Paul R. Gyllenhammer
THE PASSIVITY OF OPTIMALIZING PRACTICES:
A DEVELOPMENT OF HUSSERL’S TRANSCENDENTAL AESTHETICS
|
|
|
83.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Christopher Robertson
SLOTE ON ORDINARY MORAL THOUGHT AND THEORIZATION
|
|
|
84.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Whitley Kaufman
WHY WOULD SOMEONE DO WRONG KNOWINGLY?
|
|
|
85.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Teresa Robertson
(IN THE FICTION/MYTH) THE NUMBER SEVENTEEN CROSSES THE RUBICON
|
|
|
86.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Lydia L. Moland
THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING COMMITTED:
THOUGHTS ON KORSGAARD’S SOURCES OF NORMATIVITY
|
|
|
87.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Mark T. Brown
THE ELIMINATION OF PERSONAL IDENTITY
|
|
|
88.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
James Cain
FRANKFURT STYLE EXAMPLES
|
|
|
89.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Kenneth F. Rogerson
WAS EVERYTHING BEAUTIFUL FOR KANT?
|
|
|
90.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Deborah Hansen Soles
ANTI-CARTESIAN EPISTEMOLOGY:
DAVIDSON’S NATURALISM
|
|
|
91.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Doran A. Recker
IMAGES AND IMAGINATION IN DESCARTES’SCIENCE
|
|
|
92.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Jamie Phillips
WHY YOU SHOULDN’T BELIEVE IN ZOMBIES (OR THEIR FRIENDS!)
|
|
|
93.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Michael W. Austin
ON THE ALLEGED IRRATIONALITY OF ETHICAL INTUITIONISM:
ARE ETHICAL INTUITIONS EPISTEMICALLY SUSPECT?
|
|
|
94.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
Robert S. Colter
LOGOS AND JUSTIFICATION IN PLATO’S THEAETETUS
|
|
|
95.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 1
James Page
ARE NUMBERS UNIVERSALS AND SETS THEIR INSTANCES?
|
|
|
96.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 2
Douglas Browning
COMMENTS ON DAVID HILDEBRAND’S “THE NEOPRAGMATIST TURN”
|
|
|
97.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 2
Ben Eggleston
EVERYTHING IS WHAT IT IS, AND NOT ANOTHER THING: COMMENTS ON AUSTIN
|
|
|
98.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 2
Jim D. Shelton
INTELLIGENT DESIGN:
THE BRIDGE BETWEEN SCIENCE AND THEOLOGY
|
|
|
99.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 2
Timothy Dunn
ROBERTSON AND SLOTE ON ORDINARY MORAL THOUGHT AND THERIZATION
|
|
|
100.
|
Southwest Philosophy Review:
Volume >
19 >
Issue: 2
Joseph Bien
REITAN, KING AND THE BELOVED COMMUNITY
|
|
|