In preparation for the 2016 Pacific APA Division Meeting coming up later this month, I am again using the What Are You Reading? column to highlight books being featured in author-meets-critics sessions and book symposiums. Because of the huge number of books being showcased in this way, half the books will be mentioned in this week’s column, and the other half in next week’s. In no particular order, here is the first half of the list:
- S. Matthew Liao, The Right to Be Loved
- Carlin Romano, America the Philosophical
- Jay L. Garfield, Engaging Buddhism: Why It Matters to Philosophy
- Nancy Bauer, How to Do Things with Pornography
- Seana Valentine Shiffrin, Speech Matters: On Lying, Morality, and the Law
- J. Clerk Shaw, Plato’s Anti-Hedonism and the Protagoras
- James A. Harris, Hume: An Intellectual Biography
- John M. Doris, Talking to Our Selves
- Anthony J. Steinbock, Moral Emotions: Reclaiming the Evidence of the Heart
- Thomas Hurka, British Ethical Theorists from Sidgwick to Ewing
- Gillian Barker, Beyond Biofatalism: Human Nature for an Evolving World
- Bence Nanay, Aesthetics as Philosophy of Perception
- Steven R. Ratner, The Thin Justice of International Law: A Moral Reckoning of the Law of Nations
- Barry Allen, Vanishing into Things: Knowledge in Chinese Tradition
- Nico Orlandi, The Innocent Eye: Why Vision Is Not a Cognitive Process
- A. A. Long, Greek Models of Mind and Self
- Derk Pereboom, Free Will, Agency, and Meaning in Life
- Kevin McCain, Evidentialism and Epistemic Justification
- Mathias Frisch, Causal Reasoning in Physics
- Erin McKenna and Scott L. Pratt, American Philosophy: From Wounded Knee to the Present
- Nicholas F. Stang, Kant’s Modal Metaphysics
- Paul Bloomfield, The Virtues of Happiness: A Theory of the Good Life
- K. E. Boxer, Rethinking Responsibility
- David Z. Albert, After Physics
What are you reading?