Philosophy Pathways
Discipline | Philosophy |
---|---|
Language | English |
Edited by | Geoffrey Klempner |
Publication details | |
Publication history | January 2001–present |
Publisher |
International Society for Philosophers |
Frequency | Irregular |
Yes | |
Find out here | |
Indexing | |
ISSN |
2043-0728 |
OCLC no. | 50011425 |
Links | |
Philosophy Pathways is an open access, transparent peer reviewed, electronic journal in philosophy.[1] The editor-in-chief is Geoffrey Klempner, the former director of studies (1996–2002), Philosophical Society of England. It was established in January 2001 and is published by the partner organizations International Society for Philosophers (ISFP)[2][3] and Pathways School of Philosophy (Pathways to Philosophy).[4][5]
Reception
In January 2005, The Daily Telegraph wrote, "The International Society for Philosophers, which is aimed at anyone interested in philosophy, now has 800 members in 68 countries, though it is only two years old. The society's magazine, Philosophy Pathways, goes out fortnightly to more than 1,000 addresses, and around 400 students from 40 countries have participated in its distance learning programme."[6] In May 2014, the British philosopher and literary critic Christopher Norris sent an email to Geoffrey Klempner with the following message: "I am sending (by attachment) a poem -- actually a long verse-essay -- that you might wish to publish in a forthcoming number of Philosophy Pathways. I should perhaps explain that the piece originates in my various published exchanges with Rorty many years back, and that it responds to his challenge that philosophy should become more adventurous, exploratory, inventive, metaphorical, and -- in short -- poetic. Hence my otherwise rather odd choice of verse as a medium in which to conduct philosophical debate." On the 1st of the following June, a couple of Norris' works were published in Philosophy Pathways.[7]
References
- ↑ ISFP: profile at the Arts and Humanities Community Resource, University of Oxford. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
- ↑ Official website. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
- ↑ Geoffrey Klempner: Brief CV. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
- ↑ Pathways to Philosophy: profile at the Arts and Humanities Community Resource, University of Oxford. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
- ↑ Pathways to Philosophy: Official website. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
- ↑ Talbot, Marianne (21 January 2005). I link, therefore I am. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
- ↑ Special Christopher Norris Issue. Philosophy Pathways. Issue No. 186. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
Further reading
- Cleary, Skye (9 August 2017). Where the Philosophical and Literary Collide. Blog of the APA.
- Dewey, Caitlin (11 June 2014). A metaphysical inquiry: If Donald Trump retweets a fake Donald Trump quote … does the quote become real?. The Washington Post.
- Evans, Jules (20 August 2012). Interview: Geoffrey Klempner on taking philosophy beyond academia. Centre for the History of the Emotions.
- Gerrold, David (1972). The Man Who Folded Himself. BenBella Books: 2003. p. 127.
- Gunning, Jennifer and Holm, Søren, ed. (2006). Ethics, Law and Society: Volume II. Ashgate Publishing. p. xiv.
- Harris, Errol E (1993). Eloquence, Cogency, or Sleight of Hand: A Reply to Klempner. Hegel Bulletin: Cambridge University Press: Volume 14, Issue 1-2 (number 27/28), pp. 98–102.
- Klempner, Geoffrey (February 2002). glass house philosopher / notebook 1: To the members of the Philosophical Society of England, ISFP's sister organization.
- Kolb, Robert W., ed. (2008). Encyclopedia of Business Ethics and Society. SAGE Publications. p. 2293.
- Lain, Douglas (19 March 2012). Time Travel in the Second Person: The Man Who Folded Himself. Tor.com.
- Le Bon, Tim (2003). Out and about: Our correspondent looks at some correspondence. The Philosophers' Magazine. Issue 24, page 18.
- Norris, Christopher (1 June 2014). Special Christopher Norris Issue. Philosophy Pathways. Issue no. 186.
- Schain, Richard (2010). Sculpting Sententiae: An Art Form of Independent Philosophy. Xlibris. p. 87.
- Talbot, Marianne (21 January 2005). I link, therefore I am. The Daily Telegraph.
- Yekenkurul, Seher (29 December 2006). Interview with David Chalmers. Philosophy Pathways. Issue no. 123.
External links
- Official website
- International Society for Philosophers
- Pathways to Philosophy at philosophynow.org
- Advice by Geoffrey Klempner at Philosothon
- Links at SAPERE: 6. P4C General
- Link at inside.trinity.edu: National Journals