“Margaret Cavendish’s philosophical work is at last taking its rightful place in the history of seventeenth-century thought, but her writings are so voluminous and wide-ranging ...
Continue Reading →The Seventeenth-Century philosopher, scientist, poet, playwright, and novelist Margaret Cavendish went to battle with the great thinkers of her time, and arguably got the better ...
Continue Reading →Fusing speculative realism, analytical and linguistic philosophy this book theorises the fundamental impact the experience of reading has on us. In reading, language provides us ...
Continue Reading →If the Anthropocene represents a new epoch of thought, it also represents a new form of materiality and historicity for the human as strata and ...
Continue Reading →Denise Riley is renowned as a feminist theorist and a poet and for her remarkable refiguring of familiar but intransigent problems of identity, expression, language, ...
Continue Reading →The short text that follows has intrigued, confused, and provoked scholars since its discovery in the Eastern Arabah archaeological digs, near the ancient city of ...
Continue Reading →Thomas Nail argues convincingly and systematically that Lucretius was not an atomist, but a thinker of kinetic flux. In doing so, he completely overthrows the ...
Continue Reading →Materialism is at once the most general of concepts, capable of gesturing to anything that seems either foundational or physicalist, and yet is also one ...
Continue Reading →From one of continental philosophy’s most distinctive voices comes a creative contribution to spatial studies, environmental philosophy, and phenomenology. Edward S. Casey identifies how important ...
Continue Reading →Thomas Williams presents the most extensive collection of John Duns Scotus’s work on ethics and moral psychology available in English. John Duns Scotus: Selected Writings ...
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