All Stories

  1. :Antigone’s Example: Early Modern Women’s Political Writing in Times of Civil War from Christine de Pizan to Helen Maria Williams
  2. Feminism
  3. Moral Psychology in History: From the Ancient to Early Modern Period
  4. The Vision of Money in the Writings of Christine de Pizan
  5. The moral problem is a Hume problem
  6. On Semantic and Ontic Truth
  7. Hermann Lotze’s Influence on Twentieth Century Philosophy, written by Nikolay Milkov
  8. Catharine Macaulay's Philosophy and Her Influence on Mary Wollstonecraft
  9. Women's Reception of Kant, 1790–1810
  10. Macaulay, Catharine
  11. The Human in Feminist Theory: Or Woman Is a Social Animal, I’m Not So Sure About Man
  12. On E.E. Constance Jones’s Account of Categorical Propositions and Her Defence of Frege
  13. Sense, reference, and contemporary “predicativism”
  14. Catharine Macaulay and the Reception of Hobbes During the Eighteenth Century
  15. Catharine Macaulay and the concept of “radical enlightenment”
  16. Louise Keralio-Robert: Feminism, Virtue, and the Problem of Fanaticism
  17. Catharine Macaulay
  18. The Miroir des dames, the Chapelet des vertus, and Christine de Pizan’s Sources
  19. Joan of Arc and Christine de Pizan's Ditié
  20. Macaulay, Catharine
  21. Germaine deStaël and the Politics of Taste
  22. The Rights of Woman and the Equal Rights of Men
  23. Catharine Macaulay’s Republican Enlightenment
  24. Reconsidering Beauvoir’s Hegelianism
  25. Reason and Experience in Women’s Responses to Descartes and Locke
  26. Women, Early Modern: Society and Sociability
  27. Indicating a Translation for ‘Bedeutung’
  28. On the Philosophical Significance of Eighteenth-Century Female ‘Republicans’
  29. The Social and Political Philosophy of Mary Wollstonecraft
  30. Introducing the Miroir des Dames
  31. Virtue Ethics and the Origins of Feminism: The Case of Christine de Pizan
  32. Review of Jonathan Israel, The Expanding Blaze. How the American Revolution Ignited the World, 1775–1848, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017, 755 pp, HB
  33. On some footnotes to Catharine Trotter Cockburn’s Defence of the Essay Of Human Understanding
  34. The Boke of the Cyte of Ladyes by Christine de Pizan
  35. Locke, Enlightenment, and Liberty in the Works of Catharine Macaulay and her Contemporaries
  36. Catharine Macaulay’s enlightenment faith and radical politics
  37. JoEllen DeLucia, A Feminine Enlightenment: British Women Writers and the Philosophy of Progress, 1759–1820
  38. Re‐Imagining the Philosophical Conversation
  39. Catherine Macaulay's French Connections
  40. Reassessing the Impact of the “Republican Virago”
  41. Political Ideas of Enlightenment Women
  42. Frege on Existence and Non-existence
  43. A Moral Philosophy of Their Own? The Moral and Political Thought of Eighteenth-Century British Women
  44. Introduction
  45. Citizenship and the Origins of Women’s History in the United States. By Teresa Anne Murphy. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013. 240p. $42.50.
  46. Carol Pal. Republic of Women: Rethinking the Republic of Letters in the Seventeenth Century.
  47. Women's Political Thought in Europe, 1700-1800
  48. WAS CHRISTINE DE PIZAN AT POISSY 1418-1429?
  49. Women's Writing and the Early Modern Genre Wars
  50. Nadia Margolis, An Introduction to Christine de Pizan. (New Perspectives on Medieval Literature: Authors and Traditions.) Gainsville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2011. Pp. xxiii, 272. $69.95. ISBN: 9780813036502.
  51. Catharine Macaulay on the Will
  52. Liberty andVirtue inCatherineMacaulay'sEnlightenmentPhilosophy
  53. In memoriam
  54. From Le Miroir des dames to Le Livre des trois vertus
  55. Virtue Ethics for Women 1250-1500
  56. Women, Hegel, and Recognition in The Second Sex
  57. Necessitating Nominalism
  58. Conclusion
  59. Preface
  60. Christine de Pizan
  61. From Anne de Beaujeu to Marguerite de Navarre
  62. From the Reformation to Marie le Jars de Gournay
  63. Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle
  64. Mary Astell
  65. Quaker women
  66. Queen Elizabeth I of England
  67. The Fronde and Madeleine de Scudéry
  68. Women of late seventeenth-century France
  69. Women of the English civil war era
  70. Women of the Glorious Revolution
  71. Women of the Italian Renaissance
  72. Women's Political Thought in Europe, 1400-1700
  73. Val Plumwood
  74. The Context Principle and Dummett's Argument for Anti-realism
  75. Fictions of a feminine philosophical persona: Christine de Pizan, Margaret Cavendish and philosophia lost
  76. Emasculating Metaphor: Whither the Maleness of Reason?
  77. Development of a Topical Protein Therapeutic for Human Papillomavirus and Associated Cancers
  78. Realism and Antirealism
  79. Davidson's Derangement: Of the Conceptual Priority of Language
  80. Philosophy and Metaphor: The Significance of Christine's 'Blunders'
  81. Distance, Divided Responsibility and Universalizability
  82. The Other as Another Other
  83. Analysing analytic philosophy: The rise of analytic philosophy
  84. De Sade, de Beauvoir and Dworkin
  85. Was Wittgenstein Frege's Heir
  86. A Plague on Both Your Houses
  87. Does Science Persecute Women? The case of the 16th–17th Century Witch-hunts
  88. The Passions and the Imagination in Wollstonecraft's Theory of Moral Judgement
  89. Rousseau's women
  90. Two Distinctions in Environmental Goodness
  91. Christine De Pisan and Thomas Hobbes
  92. Freud, Wollstonecraft, and Ecofeminism
  93. Reason and feeling: Resisting the dichotomy
  94. Brain writing and Derrida
  95. Dummett's Ought from Is
  96. Femininity and transcendence
  97. Prostitution, Exploitation and Taboo
  98. Psychologism and anti-realism
  99. RAWLS, WOMEN AND THE PRIORITY OF LIBERTY
  100. Is a logic for belief sentences possible?