“Not every problem someone has with his girlfriend [or boyfriend - Ed.] is necessarily due to the capitalist mode of production.”
Nice one, Herbert. Out today, Jacob McNulty's much-needed philosophical intro to Herbert Marcuse. https://t.co/5mbyQ3OIUK
Not long until World Philosophy Day, 21st November and we could use some clear thinking. Some backlist classics and new titles, including the first book on the philosophy of bitcoin @tandfhss https://t.co/kdt7FEQ9aY
Building a book list is often about creating clusters of titles on the same topic. Takes time, but now have a great example: the philosophy of migration and immigration, with a terrific handbook just gone to press, ed by Sahar Akhtar at Georgetown https://t.co/sssiszbnG0
@Anarchievsky@johnfsymons The hardcover price is for academic libraries. It's not listed yet, but as with all books in the series, there will be an ebook version for around $45 published simultaneously.
@QCassam delivering the Joint Session inaugural address on liberation philosophy. Are you a purist, or a meliorative philosopher? A bit of both? Then check out the Routledge books table - we publish for all philosophical stripes @Aristotweets#jointsession24@Routledge_Phil
Are you heading to Birmingham on Friday for the 2024 Joint Session? Have a first look at the programme here: https://t.co/AS1zwc6Kkl
And tag us in your tweets!
Highly recommended reading for WRD tomorrow is Michael Dummett's 'On Immigration and Refugees'. First published in 2001 it's as relevant as ever and just published in our Routledge Classics series, with a fantastic new foreword by @DrSJFine@CambridgePhilos
Tomorrow is World Refugee Day, and Corpus Fellow @DrSJFine will be on a panel at a @CentreGHuM conference offering a perspective from the humanities in 'Citizens, Borders, Displacement'. Details: https://t.co/s3ExVWD0ej
A small sample of the Routledge titles to browse at the upocoming Joint Session. Looking forward to @QCassam inaugural address on liberation philosophy @Routledge_Phil@Aristotweets
This is a terrific resource and superbly edited by Ema Sullivan-Bissett. It won't be out in time for the Joint Session @Aristotweets but I'll have a flyer with a disc for those interested @Ema_SB@Routledge_Phil https://t.co/MykA3otH94
It is coming in 2025! Ema Sullivan-Bissett has created a new incredible resource for philosophers interested in delusions (38 chapters!), and I am so excited to be part of it https://t.co/48liCsrs9D
Looking forward to the Joint Session in B'ham next month. We'll have recent Routledge titles on display and I'm available to talk about ideas for new books @Aristotweets@Routledge_Phil https://t.co/5q1AQF31Fq https://t.co/h06KVUnpbJ https://t.co/3WOdaCbOnP
The latest volumes in our Little Debates about Big Questions series. A series with a wide scope.
(20% of all volumes in the series until early next week.)
https://t.co/A0NKL1rKFD
@aytchellesse@Routledge_Phil@routledgebooks
For all teachers of philosophy of science, STS and philosophy of social science too: the first edition of *Recipes for Science* was both fresh in its approach to the topic and superbly written. The second is even better and out now. https://t.co/Zv2QUONRF0 @Routledge_Phil
@dbatherwoods Nice edition. We actually published it in Routledge Classics last year, with a new foreword by Christopher Hamilton 👍https://t.co/ojZzJDN5cq