Canadian Journal of Philosophy

Canadian Journal of Philosophy  
Discipline Philosophy
Language English
Edited by Michael Stingl
Publication details
Publication history
1971–present
Publisher
Frequency Quarterly
Standard abbreviations
Can. J. Philos.
Indexing
ISSN 0045-5091 (print)
1911-0820 (web)
OCLC no. 1553152
Links

The Canadian Journal of Philosophy is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal of philosophy that was established in 1971 by John King-Farlow, Kai Nielsen, T.M. Penelhum, and W.W. Rozeboom. It is published by the University of Calgary Press. Besides the regular issues, a supplementary volume is produced once per year consisting of invited papers on a particular philosophical topic.

Notable articles

Some of the most notable articles published in the journal are (in date order):

  • "Legal Paternalism" (1974) - Joel Feinberg
  • "Counterfactuals and Possible Worlds" (1974) - Jonathan Bennett
  • "The Representative Theory of Perception" (1975) - Barry Maund
  • "The Nature of Laws" (1977) - Michael Tooley
  • "Modifiers and Quantifiers in Natural Language" (1980) - Terence Parsons
  • "Misinformation" (1989) - Peter Godfrey-Smith
  • "The Ontology of Complex Systems" (1994) - William C. Wimsatt
  • "Breaking Up: An Essay on Secession" (1994) - David Gauthier
  • "Are Thought Experiments Just What You Thought?" (1996) - John D. Norton


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.