Women of Ideas
Interviews from Philosophy Bites
Herausgeber: Finn, Suki
Women of Ideas
Interviews from Philosophy Bites
Herausgeber: Finn, Suki
- Gebundenes Buch
Thirty women philosophers explore topics of pressing interest for today. Their ideas are discussed in lively interviews from Philosophy Bites, the world's foremost philosophy podcast. These conversations illuminate diverse aspects of being human-personal, social, and political-for anyone interested in philosophical reflection on our world.
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Thirty women philosophers explore topics of pressing interest for today. Their ideas are discussed in lively interviews from Philosophy Bites, the world's foremost philosophy podcast. These conversations illuminate diverse aspects of being human-personal, social, and political-for anyone interested in philosophical reflection on our world.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 208mm x 142mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 470g
- ISBN-13: 9780198859925
- ISBN-10: 0198859929
- Artikelnr.: 60201243
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 208mm x 142mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 470g
- ISBN-13: 9780198859925
- ISBN-10: 0198859929
- Artikelnr.: 60201243
Suki Finn is a Lecturer in Philosophy at Royal Holloway, University of London. She researches in the areas of metametaphysics, the philosophy of logic, the metaphysics of pregnancy, the epistemology of love, and feminist and queer theory. Suki has published her work in various philosophy journals, edited collections, and in the online magazine Aeon. Women of Ideas is Suki's first book. Suki is on the Executive Committee for the Society for Women in Philosophy UK, and on the Council for the Royal Institute of Philosophy. In her other life, Suki is a musician. David Edmonds is the author or editor of a dozen philosophy books including The Murder of Professor Schlick, Would You Kill the Fat Man?, the children's novel (with Bertie Fraser) Undercover Robot, and (with John Eidinow) the international best-seller Wittgenstein's Poker. He is a BBC presenter/producer and a Distinguished Research Fellow at the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics. He and Nigel Warburton founded Philosophy Bites in 2007. On Twitter he is @DavidEdmonds100. Nigel Warburton is a freelance philosopher, and consultant editor for the online magazine Aeon and for the Five Books website. He was formerly a university philosophy lecturer for over twenty years. His books include A Little History of Philosophy, Philosophy: The Basics, Philosophy: The Classics, Thinking from A to Z, The Art Question, and Free Speech: A Very Short Introduction. With David Edmonds he makes the podcast Philosophy Bites and they have already jointly edited three books based on the series. On Twitter he is @philosophybites.
Anecdotes
Interviews
Amia Srinivasan: What is a Woman?
Janet Radcliffe Richards: Men's and Women's Natures
Patricia Smith Churchland: What neuroscience can teach us about morality
Christine M. Korsgaard: The Status of Animals
Ashwini Vasanthakumar: Do victims have obligations too?
Miranda Fricker: Blame and Historic Injustice
Kimberley Brownlee: Social Deprivation
Sarah Fine: The Right to Exclude
Anne Phillips: Multiculturalism and Liberalism
Jennifer Saul: Implicit Bias
Martha C. Nussbaum: Disgust
Elisabeth Schellekens: Disagreement about Taste
Emma Borg: Language and Context
Rebecca Roache: Swearing
Teresa M. Bejan: Civility
Katherine Hawley: Trustworthiness
Onora O'Neill: Medical Consent
Katalin Farkas: Knowing a Person
Jennifer Nagel: Intuitions about Knowledge
Susan James: Michel Foucault and Knowledge
Kate Kirkpatrick: The Life and Work of Simone de Beauvoir
Katherine J. Morris: Merleau-Ponty on the Body
Alison Gopnik: Hume and Buddhism
Katrin Flikschuh: Philosophy in Africa
Angie Hobbs: Plato on War
Helen Beebee: Possible Worlds
Tamar Szabó Gendler: Why Philosophers use Examples
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein: Progress in Philosophy
Mary Warnock: Philosophy and Public Life
Biographies
Interviews
Amia Srinivasan: What is a Woman?
Janet Radcliffe Richards: Men's and Women's Natures
Patricia Smith Churchland: What neuroscience can teach us about morality
Christine M. Korsgaard: The Status of Animals
Ashwini Vasanthakumar: Do victims have obligations too?
Miranda Fricker: Blame and Historic Injustice
Kimberley Brownlee: Social Deprivation
Sarah Fine: The Right to Exclude
Anne Phillips: Multiculturalism and Liberalism
Jennifer Saul: Implicit Bias
Martha C. Nussbaum: Disgust
Elisabeth Schellekens: Disagreement about Taste
Emma Borg: Language and Context
Rebecca Roache: Swearing
Teresa M. Bejan: Civility
Katherine Hawley: Trustworthiness
Onora O'Neill: Medical Consent
Katalin Farkas: Knowing a Person
Jennifer Nagel: Intuitions about Knowledge
Susan James: Michel Foucault and Knowledge
Kate Kirkpatrick: The Life and Work of Simone de Beauvoir
Katherine J. Morris: Merleau-Ponty on the Body
Alison Gopnik: Hume and Buddhism
Katrin Flikschuh: Philosophy in Africa
Angie Hobbs: Plato on War
Helen Beebee: Possible Worlds
Tamar Szabó Gendler: Why Philosophers use Examples
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein: Progress in Philosophy
Mary Warnock: Philosophy and Public Life
Biographies
Anecdotes
Interviews
Amia Srinivasan: What is a Woman?
Janet Radcliffe Richards: Men's and Women's Natures
Patricia Smith Churchland: What neuroscience can teach us about morality
Christine M. Korsgaard: The Status of Animals
Ashwini Vasanthakumar: Do victims have obligations too?
Miranda Fricker: Blame and Historic Injustice
Kimberley Brownlee: Social Deprivation
Sarah Fine: The Right to Exclude
Anne Phillips: Multiculturalism and Liberalism
Jennifer Saul: Implicit Bias
Martha C. Nussbaum: Disgust
Elisabeth Schellekens: Disagreement about Taste
Emma Borg: Language and Context
Rebecca Roache: Swearing
Teresa M. Bejan: Civility
Katherine Hawley: Trustworthiness
Onora O'Neill: Medical Consent
Katalin Farkas: Knowing a Person
Jennifer Nagel: Intuitions about Knowledge
Susan James: Michel Foucault and Knowledge
Kate Kirkpatrick: The Life and Work of Simone de Beauvoir
Katherine J. Morris: Merleau-Ponty on the Body
Alison Gopnik: Hume and Buddhism
Katrin Flikschuh: Philosophy in Africa
Angie Hobbs: Plato on War
Helen Beebee: Possible Worlds
Tamar Szabó Gendler: Why Philosophers use Examples
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein: Progress in Philosophy
Mary Warnock: Philosophy and Public Life
Biographies
Interviews
Amia Srinivasan: What is a Woman?
Janet Radcliffe Richards: Men's and Women's Natures
Patricia Smith Churchland: What neuroscience can teach us about morality
Christine M. Korsgaard: The Status of Animals
Ashwini Vasanthakumar: Do victims have obligations too?
Miranda Fricker: Blame and Historic Injustice
Kimberley Brownlee: Social Deprivation
Sarah Fine: The Right to Exclude
Anne Phillips: Multiculturalism and Liberalism
Jennifer Saul: Implicit Bias
Martha C. Nussbaum: Disgust
Elisabeth Schellekens: Disagreement about Taste
Emma Borg: Language and Context
Rebecca Roache: Swearing
Teresa M. Bejan: Civility
Katherine Hawley: Trustworthiness
Onora O'Neill: Medical Consent
Katalin Farkas: Knowing a Person
Jennifer Nagel: Intuitions about Knowledge
Susan James: Michel Foucault and Knowledge
Kate Kirkpatrick: The Life and Work of Simone de Beauvoir
Katherine J. Morris: Merleau-Ponty on the Body
Alison Gopnik: Hume and Buddhism
Katrin Flikschuh: Philosophy in Africa
Angie Hobbs: Plato on War
Helen Beebee: Possible Worlds
Tamar Szabó Gendler: Why Philosophers use Examples
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein: Progress in Philosophy
Mary Warnock: Philosophy and Public Life
Biographies