This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this recordBook review of As If: Idealization and Ideals by Kwame Anthony Appiah. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017.Kwame Anthony Appiah’s engaging and insightful new book focuses on idealisation. Based on three Carus Lectures delivered at the 2013 Eastern Division Meetings of the American Philosophical Association, the book takes its inspiration from the German philosopher Hans Vaihinger and his The Philosophy of ‘As If’ (1911). Long neglected, Vaihinger’s work has recently been revisited by philosophers of science interested in scientific modelling, most notably Arthur Fine. Vaihinger’s own interests were much broader, however, tak...
Now it’s the time to hear lots of talks about crisis of philosophy and disappearance of humanities. ...
Arjun Appadurai is a prominent contemporary social-cultural anthropologist who has contributed signi...
Between 1956 and 1958, 22-year-old French psychologist Jean-Pierre Deconchy taught the youngest stud...
topics of morality and ethics? Some philosophers fear, and some scientists seem to hope, that morali...
Appiah’s latest book does something distinctive: it shows why we need to take another look at very f...
Conditionals are a feature of historiography. Despite this, historiographical research is focused pr...
[Extract] Idolatry is the worship of false gods. According to Wayne Cristaudo’s magnificent disquisi...
Karl Popper\u27s reputation as a philosopher of science far exceeds his reputation as a political th...
Aristotle thought that phantasia (imagination), perception, and mind were equally important. In one ...
When it comes to understanding the natural world, from plants to planets, nothing beats a scientific...
Afsāniʹhā-yi Ārāmʹbakhsh (‘Tranquilizing Myths’) is a newly published (Spring 1396 Sh./ 2017) resear...
This book on modelling in economics is a noteworthy instance of integrated history and philosophy of...
Eleanor Johnson's book demonstrates that “the aesthetic power of literary language—its power to make...
With empirical distinction, in The world as abyss, Jonathan Pugh and David Chandler embrace an uncon...
A book review of The Moral, Social and Political Philosophy of the British Idealists. Edited by Will...
Now it’s the time to hear lots of talks about crisis of philosophy and disappearance of humanities. ...
Arjun Appadurai is a prominent contemporary social-cultural anthropologist who has contributed signi...
Between 1956 and 1958, 22-year-old French psychologist Jean-Pierre Deconchy taught the youngest stud...
topics of morality and ethics? Some philosophers fear, and some scientists seem to hope, that morali...
Appiah’s latest book does something distinctive: it shows why we need to take another look at very f...
Conditionals are a feature of historiography. Despite this, historiographical research is focused pr...
[Extract] Idolatry is the worship of false gods. According to Wayne Cristaudo’s magnificent disquisi...
Karl Popper\u27s reputation as a philosopher of science far exceeds his reputation as a political th...
Aristotle thought that phantasia (imagination), perception, and mind were equally important. In one ...
When it comes to understanding the natural world, from plants to planets, nothing beats a scientific...
Afsāniʹhā-yi Ārāmʹbakhsh (‘Tranquilizing Myths’) is a newly published (Spring 1396 Sh./ 2017) resear...
This book on modelling in economics is a noteworthy instance of integrated history and philosophy of...
Eleanor Johnson's book demonstrates that “the aesthetic power of literary language—its power to make...
With empirical distinction, in The world as abyss, Jonathan Pugh and David Chandler embrace an uncon...
A book review of The Moral, Social and Political Philosophy of the British Idealists. Edited by Will...
Now it’s the time to hear lots of talks about crisis of philosophy and disappearance of humanities. ...
Arjun Appadurai is a prominent contemporary social-cultural anthropologist who has contributed signi...
Between 1956 and 1958, 22-year-old French psychologist Jean-Pierre Deconchy taught the youngest stud...