...Previous blog posts by Peter Adamson, Jonardon Ganeri, Karyn Lai, and Alison Stone have offered suggestions for teaching Islamic, Indian, and Chinese philosophy, as well as women philosophers of 19th...
Building on blog posts from Peter Adamson, Jonardon Ganeri, and Karyn Lai with suggestions for introducing Islamic, Indian, and Chinese philosophy into thematic courses, here I offer some suggestions for...
In his new book, Inwardness: An Outsiders’ Guide, Jonardon Ganeri explores questions about our inner lives. He includes perspectives from a range of traditions, both ancient and modern, from the...
Jonardon Ganeri is the Bimal. K. Matilal Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. He is a philosopher whose work draws on a variety of philosophical traditions to...
To view a contributors bio, click Hsiang-Yun Chen Hsiang-Yun Chen is an assistant research fellow at The Institute of European and American Studies (IEAS) at Academia Sinica and works primarily...
...as the leading “new reason” (Navya Nyaya) philosophers in Varanasi. These rather secular thinkers advocated empiricism, for example by reviving the ancient Vaisesika atomism of Kanada. As Jonardon Ganeri writes...
...and was co-authored with Jonardon Ganeri. It is devoted to classical Indian philosophy. I’m currently at work on two volumes’ worth of material about Africana philosophy, with co-author Chike Jeffers,...
...offer? I do. There are many reasons to be hopeful. Rachel McKinnon, Irami Osei-Frimpong, and John Corvino deserve special mention for making inroads in the YouTube space. Peter Adamson, Jonardon...
Jonardon Ganeri has written a piece on this blog, with helpful suggestions on how non-experts may introduce materials from Indian philosophy into their thematically-organised courses. I follow up here with...