Online Philosophy Resources Weekly Update
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March 30, 2026
This is the weekly report on new and revised entries at online philosophy resources, new reviews of philosophy books, new podcast episodes, recently published open access philosophy books, and more. (If we missed anything, please let us know.) SEP New: ∅ Revised: Moritz Schlick by Thomas Oberdan and Friedrich Stadler. Ethics of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics by Vincent C. Müller. Molecular Genetics by Ken Waters and Marcel Weber. Gilbert Ryle by Julia Tanney. Ernst Mally by Alexander Hieke, Gerhard Zecha, and Hamid Taieb. Greek Sources in Arabic and Islamic Philosophy by Cristina D’Ancona. IEP ∅ 1000-Word Philosophy Pragmatic Encroachment: Do Our Practical Interests Affect What We Know? by Alexandra Lloyd. BJPS Short Reads Death in Mind by Susan Monsó and Laura Danón. Why Does Causal Reasoning Work? by Naftali Weinberger, Porter Williams, and James Woodward. Recently Published Open Access Philosophy Books Disaster Resilience and Normalization: Facing Facts (Trivent) by Naomi Zack. Philosophy Podcasts and Other Media Philosophy Podcast Hub (via Jason Chen) Book Reviews* Saving Science from Quantum Mechanics by Emily Adlam is reviewed by Steven French at The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. Early Scholastic Christology: 1050-1250 by Richard Cross is reviewed by Corey Barnes at Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. Different Beasts: Humans and Animals in Spinoza and the Zhuangzi by Sonya N. Özbey is reviewed by Joshua R. Brown at Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. A World Appears: A Journey into Consciousness by Michael Pollan is reviewed by Tim Crane at Times Literary Supplement. The Ethics of Public Health Paternalism by T.M. Wilkinson is reviewed by Catelynn Kenner at Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. Omnisubjectivity: An Essay on God and Subjectivity by Linda Trinkaus Zagzebski is reviewed by Sabrina B. Little at Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. Compiled by Michael Glawson * The Book Reviews section contains links to reviews of books by philosophers in non-academic media as well as in open-access reviews published in academic journals. BONUS: Took you long enough
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