This is just a quick roundup of this week's posts over at New Work in Philosophy. This week NWP featured:
- Matilda Carter (University of Glasgow), "Minority Minds: Mental Disability and the Presumption of Value Neutrality" (Journal of Applied Philosophy, 2022)
- Hrishikesh Joshi (Bowling Green State University), “The Epistemic Significance of Social Pressure” (Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 2022)
- Jeffrey Kaplan (University of North Carolina at Greensboro), "A New Problem for Rules" (Forthcoming in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research) (video)
- Charlotte Knowles (University of Groningen), "Beyond Adaptive Preferences: Rethinking Women's Complicity in their own Subordination" (European Journal of Philosophy, 2022)
- Paul Schofield (Bates College) on recent work of Jack Samuel (NYU Law Student)
You can also visit NWP's full archive of posts, and our YouTube Channel and Playlist. Also, if you have recent or forthcoming peer-reviewed work that you'd like to share more widely, please do consider emailing us with a pitch. NWP currently has nearly 1,100 subscribers, and we feature new posts on a rolling basis as they come in.
As our About page notes,
We welcome unsolicited submissions from any professional philosopher (PhD students or beyond) or anyone who has published philosophy in legitimate peer-reviewed venues.
We particularly encourage submissions from junior philosophers and underrepresented groups in the profession, as well as postdocs, VAPs, and full or part-time faculty from a diverse variety of institutions.
Also, in addition to posting contributions by authors on their own work and the work of others (e.g. book/article reviews), we would like to encourage:
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Submissions by established (or somewhat established) philosophers that discuss/recommend new work by less/un-established philosophers who aren’t their colleagues or students.
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That readers draw our attention to other Substack pages with professional philosophical content, including their own. Substack has a nifty “recommend” feature, and we hope to draw amplify the work of other professional philosophers on Substack, as well.
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Please email marvan@ut.edu or barry.maguire@ed.ac.uk to pitch a post or draw our attention to another Substack in professional philosophy that you would like to recommend.
Is there a way you can categorize different papers by subject? It would be helpful for us to look for subjects or fields we’re interested in very easily instead of scrolling endlessly.
Posted by: Redundant | 02/08/2023 at 12:08 PM