After Herder: Philosophy of Language in the German Tradition by Michael N. Forster (Oxford University Press, 2010). (This is a very important collection, that anyone working in German philosophy of the 18th-, 19th- or 20th-centuries will need to read.)
Signals: Evolution, Learning and Information by Brian Skyrms (Oxford University Press, 2010).
Three Questions We Never Stop Asking by Michael Kellogg (Prometheus Books, 2010).
Heidegger's Nietzsche: Being and Becoming by Paul Catanu (8th House Publishing, 2010)
Placing Blame: A Theory of the Criminal Law by Michael S. Moore (paperback edition, Oxford University Press, 2010; originally published 1997).
Relativism: A Contemporary Anthology edited by Michael Krausz (Columbia University Press, 2010).
UPDATE (9/9): Just today, five more books arrived, all from VIP/Automatic Press, in the 5 Questions series:
Epistemic Logic edited by Vincent Hendricks & Olivier Roy (2010).
Mind and Consciousness edited by Patrick Grim (2009).
Philosophy of Computing and Information edited by Luciano Floridi (2008).
Living Technology edited by Mark Bedau et al. (2010).
Probability and Statistics edited by Alan Hajek & Vincent Hendricks (2009).
Recent Comments