Harman Patil (Editor)

Philosophers' Imprint

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Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
  
the Imprint

Language
  
English

Discipline
  
Philosophy

Publication history
  
2001–present

Edited by
  
J. David Velleman, Stephen Darwall

Publisher
  
University of Michigan Digital Library (U.S.)

Philosophers' Imprint is a refereed philosophy journal, edited by Stephen Darwall and J. David Velleman. The journal is advised by an international board of editors and published on the Internet by the University of Michigan Digital Library. Unlike many other philosophy journals, the Imprint offers access to its published articles for free to anyone on the World Wide Web—no subscription or registration whatsoever is required. While articles are not published during regular intervals, readers can be notified of new publications by mailing list.

Contents

The mission

The idea behind Philosophers' Imprint was inspired by the Open Access movement. The goal is to start the foundation for a "future in which academic libraries no longer spend millions of dollars purchasing, binding, housing, and repairing printed journals, because they have assumed the role of publishers, cooperatively disseminating the results of academic research for free, via the Internet."

Notable articles

The following is a partial (in both senses) list of some of the most notable articles in the Imprint (in date order):

  • "The Question of Realism" (2001) - Kit Fine
  • "Normativity, Commitment, and Instrumental Reason" (2001) - R. Jay Wallace
  • "Do Demonstratives Have Senses?" (2002) - Richard G. Heck
  • "Thoroughly Modern McTaggart" (2002) - John Earman
  • "The Role of Perception in Demonstrative Reference" (2002) - Susanna Siegel
  • "Getting Told and Being Believed" (2005) - Richard Moran
  • References

    Philosophers' Imprint Wikipedia