The Philosopher
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"The Philosopher" is a name sometimes applied to Aristotle; for philosophers in general, see philosophy. For the symphony, see Symphony No. 22 (Haydn).
The Philosopher | |
---|---|
Discipline | Philosophy |
Language | English |
Publication details | |
Publisher | The Philosophical Society of England (United Kingdom) |
Publication history | 1923–present |
Frequency | Biannually |
Indexing | |
ISSN |
0967-6074 |
Links | |
The Philosopher is a peer-reviewed academic journal that was established in 1923 and is one of the oldest general philosophy journals in the world.[citation needed] It publishes short, original, and accessible articles. It is the official journal of The Philosophical Society of England.
Notable articles
Historically interesting and notable articles, all available to the general public via its website, include:
- "Science, Art and Play", From Volume XIII 1935, by Erwin Schödinger;
- Moritz Schlick on 'Unanswerable Questions", Volume XIII, 1935, and
- "Individual Psychology and Education", Volume XIII, 1936, by John Dewey.
Editors
The past editors of the journal are:[1]
- First series, 1923–1948: Ada Sheridan, W.H.S. Dumphreys, Thomas Greenwood
- Second series, marked by emphasis on Philosophy and Religion, 1949–1972: C.S. Flick, Victor Rienaecker, A.J. Sinclair-Burton
- Third series, marked by a return to "general philosophy", 1973–1988: George Colbran, Alan Holloway, Geoffrey Brown
- Fourth series, marked by a return to "academic philosophy", 1989–present: Keith Dowling, Michael Bavidge, Martin Cohen
See also
References
External links
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