John Rawls' A Theory of Justice is probably the most important work of political philosophy of the 20th Century. In this Philosophy Bites podcast Jonathan Wolff outlines the key features of that book and explores some of its limitations.
Cecile Fabre on Remembrance
Jesse Prinz on Thinking with Pictures
Kieran Setiya on the Mid-Life Crisis
Catherine Wilson on Epicureanism
Gregg Caruso on Freewill and Punishment
Greg Currie on the Philosophy of Film
Katherine Morris on Merleau-Ponty on the Body
Michael Devitt on Experimental Semantics
Steven Hyman on Categorising Mental Disorders
Leif Wenar on Trade and Tyranny
Katrin Flikschuh on Philosophy in Africa
Carlo Rovelli on Philosophy and Physics
John Worrall on Evidence-Based Medicine
Joshua Greene on the Construction of Thought
Graham Priest on Buddhism and Philosophy
Jesse Prinz on Is Everything Socially Constructed?
Massimo Pigliucci on the Demarcation Problem
David Owens on Duty
Kimberley Brownlee on Social Deprivation
Shelly Kagan on Speciesism
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