World Philosophy Day

In recognition of World Philosophy Day, Berghahn Journals is highlighting the following relevant articles*.

Open Access


THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL QUALITY

Evolutionary Thermodynamics and Theory of Social Quality as Links between Physics, Biology, and the Human Sciences

Jaap Westbroek, Harry Nijhuis, and Laurent van der Maesen (Vol. 10, Issue 1)


THEORIA: A Journal of Social and Political Theory

Philosophy Education and the Reconstruction of Subjectivity and Modernity in Africa

Fasil Merawi (Vol. 71, Issue 179)



Non-Ideal Philosophy as Methodology: The Case of Feminist Philosophy

Hilkje C. Hänel and Johanna M. Müller (Vol. 69, Issue 172)


Special Issue: The Azanian Philosophical Tradition (Vol. 68, Issue 168)

Free to access until November 28, 2024 with code PHILO. Redemption details here: https://bit.ly/3F5lmqg


CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE HISTORY OF CONCEPTS

Heinrich Gomperz and “Vienna Contextualism”: Historical Epistemology and Logical Empiricism

Luke O’Sullivan (Vol. 17, Issue 2)


Concepts, Beliefs, and Their Constellations: A Proposal for Analytical Categories in the Study of Human Thought

Ilkka Kärrylä (Vol. 17, Issue 1)


Eternity and Print: How Medieval Ideas of Time Influenced the Development of Mechanical Reproduction of Texts and Images

Bennett Gilbert (Vol. 15, Issue 1)


EUROPEAN JUDAISM: A Journal for the New Europe

Isaiah Berlin and the Animal Instinct

Paul Delany (Vol. 54, Issue 1)


Bath Houses: The Shared Space between Athens and Jerusalem

Lev Taylor (Vol. 53, Issue 1)


JOURNEYS: The International Journal of Travel and Travel Writing

John Allen Chau and the Designative Authority of Martyrdom: A Rhetorical Analysis

Gary McCarron (Vol. 22, Issue 2)


PROJECTIONS: The Journal for Movies and Mind

Analytic Approaches and Critical Practices: On What We Can Learn

Laura T. Di Summa (Vol. 14, Issue 3)


Mirror Neurons and Film Studies: A Cautionary Tale from a Serious Pessimist

Malcolm Turvey (Vol. 14, Issue 3)


Twofoldness in Moving Images: The Philosophy and Neuroscience of Filmic Experience

Joerg Fingerhut (Vol. 14, Issue 3)


SARTRE STUDIES INTERNATIONAL: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Existentialism and Contemporary Culture

Reading Angela Davis Beyond the Critique of Sartre

Edward O'Byrn (Vol. 28, Issue 2)


Existential Philosophy and Antiracism: An Interview with Lewis R. Gordon

Vittorio Bufacchi (Vol. 28, Issue 2)


From Jean-Paul Sartre to Critical Existentialism: Notes for an Existentialist Ethical Theory

Maria Russo (Vol. 28, Issue 1)


Anti-Racism and Existential Philosophy: An interview with Kathryn Sophia Belle

Kathryn Sophia Belle and Edward O'Byrn (Vol. 27, Issue 2)


Interrogating Sartre and Apartheid

Mabogo Percy More (Vol. 27, Issue 2)


Your Past Comes Back to Haunt You: Sartre on Pure Reflection in Response to Husserl & Levinas

Curtis Sommerlatte (Vol. 26, Issue 2)


L'Image entre le corps et l'esprit: Le Mémoire de fin d'études de Sartre

Vincent de Coorebyter (Vol. 25, Issue 1)


Sartre’s Literary Phenomenology

Andrew Inkpin (Vol. 23, Issue 1)


SCREEN BODIES: The Journal of Embodiment, Media Arts, and Technology

“Like a Dream, an Illusion, a Drop of Dew, a Flash of Lightning”: Buddhist (Un)reality, Thought Experiments, and the “Ecological Dharma Eye” in Lu Yang's Material World Knight Game Film

Livia Monnet (Vol. 7, Issue 1)


THEORIA: A Journal of Social and Political Theory

Deleuze's Postscript on the Societies of Control: Updated for Big Data and Predictive Analytics

James Brusseau (Vol. 67, Issue 164)


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Of Related Interest from Berghahn Books

OF JAGUARS AND BUTTERFLIES

Metalogues on Issues in Anthropology and Philosophy


Geoffrey Lloyd and Aparecida Vilaça


“This is a work of outstanding interest and originality, both in form and in content.” • Nicholas Jardine, Cambridge University


What are we to make of statements that jaguars see themselves as humans, or of doubts about the boundary between dreams and waking? Jointly authored by an anthropologist and a philosopher, this book investigates some of the most puzzling ideas and practices reported in modern ethnography and ancient philosophy, concerning humans, animals, persons, spirits, agency, selfhood, consciousness, nature, life, death, disease and health. The study’s twin aims are first to explore the possibility of achieving a better understanding of the materials we discuss and then to see what lessons we can draw from them to challenge and revise our own fundamental assumptions.

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