Radical Philosophy, a UK-based journal of socialist and feminist philosophy, Founded in 1972, includesessays and interviews with nearly all of the big names in academic philosophy on the left -- from Marxists, to post-structuralists, to post-colonialists, to phenomenologists, to critical theorists, to Lacanians, to queer theorists, to radical theologians, to the pragmatist Richard Rorty. The full range of radical critical theory over the past 45 years appears here, as well as contrarian responses from philosophers on the left. Michel Foucault, Alain Badiou, Judith Butler & More (1972-2018).
an online collection of original articles, primary source texts, and commentaries in the fields of philosophy and ethics designed to provide the newcomer to the discipline of philosophy with the resources necessary to read great philosophical works. We believe that with the proper guidance almost any intelligent person can begin a life-long reading program in philosophy...and perhaps even become a bit wiser in the process. includes eastern philosophy buddhism
An encyclopedia of philosophy articles written by professional philosophers. founded in 1995. The Encyclopedia receives no funding, and operates through the volunteer work of the editors, authors, volunteers, and technical advisers. staff of 30 editors and approximately 300 authors hold doctorate degrees and are professors at colleges and universities around the world, most notably from English-speaking countries.
The Philosophy Pages is an online library of philosophy and theology texts, including selected writings of philosophers from anicent times to the contemporary period, including Plato, Aristotle, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Pythagoras, amongst many others.
This collection contains canonical philosophic texts and links to scholarly philosophic organizations. The heart of Philosophy is our collection of canonical texts. There are currently only a few critical articles and essays in the Philosophy collection, and most of these have been contributed by previous editors and collection participants.
I can imagine that his Form is less homologous to his future Form as Lenin would envision him - if the Lacanian Real Lenin existed in our imagined present. Surely not if he doesn't so much borrow from the future as invest in a future that should have existed in a time when either Eddie Izzard, Thomas Pynchon, or, perhaps, Merleau-Ponty's imagined Professor Irwin Corey had led the Russian Revolution. What would Freud have said to that? Bring a razor.
Ethics Updates is designed primarily to be used by ethics instructors and their students. It is intended to provide resources and updates on current literature, both popular and professional, that relates to ethics. USD