List of Reviews:
Bear4.gif - 9.1 K
Volume 1, 1995
Volume 2, 1996
Volume 3, 1997
Volume 4, 1998
Volume 5, 1999
Volume 6, 2000


The most recent postings are listed first. Posting dates also begin each review. Many Web browsers allow searching for text within a page. Thus, you could search for a name, a title word, or a journal title that might be in this list of reviews. More sophisticated searching may be included here at a later date.

Posted 11/19/96:
"Internal Reasons," Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, vol. LV (1995), by Michael Smith (Australian National University),
Reviewed by Lee Overton (Wake Forest University) ([email protected])

Posted beginning 11/11/96:
SYMPOSIUM on "Objectivity and Truth: You'd Better Believe It," Philosophy & Public Affairs, vol. 25, Spring 1996, pp. 87-139, by Ronald Dworkin (New York University and Oxford University).
Commentators: Simon Blackburn, Michael Otsuka, Nicholas Zangwill.

Posted 10/17/96:
Hurka Replies to Critics,
Thomas Hurka (University of Calgary).
See also Symposium on Hurka

Posted beginning 9/17/96:
SYMPOSIUM on "Value Based on Preferences" Economics and Philosophy, April 1996, vol. 12 number 1, pp. 1-27, by Wlodek Rabinowicz (Lund University) and Jan Österberg (Uppsala University).
Commentators: David McNaughton, Martha Nussbaum, Mark van Roojen.

Posted 9/13/96:
"Integrity, Commitment and the Concept of a Person," American Philosophical Quarterly, vol. 33, no. 1 (January 1996), by Nancy Schauber (University of Richmond),
Reviewed by Duncan Richter (Virginia Military Institute) ([email protected])

Posted beginning 8/29/96:
SYMPOSIUM on "Monism, Pluralism, and Rational Regret" Ethics, April 1996, vol. 106, No. 3, pp. 555-75, by Thomas Hurka (University of Calgary).
Commentators: Richard Brook, Brad Hooker, Robert Johnson, Michael Stocker, Alison McIntyre.

Posted 7/31/96:
"No Place to Hide: Campbell's and Danielson's Solutions to Gauthier's Coherence Problem" Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review, XXXV, No. 2 (1996) 235-40, by Paul Viminitz (University of Waterloo),
Reviewed by Chris MacDonald (University of British Columbia)([email protected])