The Harvard Review of Philosophy

The Harvard Review of Philosophy  
Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
Harv. Rev. Philos.
Discipline Philosophy
Language English
Edited by Garrett Lam
Publication details
Publisher
Dept of Philosophy, Harvard University (United States)
Publication history
1991–present
Frequency Annual
Indexing
ISSN 1062-6239 (print)
2153-9154 (web)
OCLC no. 25557273
Links

The Harvard Review of Philosophy is an academic journal covering philosophy and published annually as a single volume since 1991.[1] The journal is entirely edited and published by students at Harvard University, mostly undergraduates.[2] All issues are available online from the Philosophy Documentation Center.

In addition to academic articles, the journal publishes interviews with living philosophers. These have included such notables as Umberto Eco, Stanley Cavell, Hilary Putnam, Richard Rorty, and Willard Van Orman Quine.[2] The first issue had an interview with John Rawls, one of the few he ever gave.[3]

Three books have been published collecting articles from the journal, one collecting some of the interviews and the others the philosophical essays:

The Hardest Logic Puzzle Ever appeared in the 1996 issue of The Harvard Review of Philosophy.[7]

See also

References

  1. "The Harvard Review of Philosophy" WorldCat
  2. 1 2 Scanlon, Thomas (2002) "Foreword" In Upham, S. Phineas, Philosophers in conversation: interviews from the Harvard Review of Philosophy Routledge, New York, pp. xi-xiii, ISBN 0-415-93779-5
  3. Audard, Catherine Audard (2007) John Rawls Acumen, Stocksfield, England, page 293, ISBN 978-1-84465-050-7
  4. Upham, S. Phineas (editor) (2002) Philosophers in conversation: interviews from the Harvard Review of Philosophy Routledge, New York, pp. xi-xiii, ISBN 0-415-93779-5
  5. Upham, S. Phineas (editor) (2008) The Space of Love and Garbage: And other Essays from The Harvard Review of Philosophy Open Court, Chicago, ISBN 978-0-8126-9620-2
  6. Upham, S. Phineas (editor) (2009) All We Need Is a Paradigm: Essays on Science, Economics, and Logic from The Harvard Review of Philosophy Open Court, Chicago, ISBN 978-0-8126-9635-6
  7. George Boolos, The hardest logic puzzle ever. The Harvard Review of Philosophy, 6:62–65, 1996.

External links

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