This is an entertaining family biography of Oxford philosophy from 1900 to 1960. Nikhil Krishnan has mined various autobiographies and reminiscences to craft a series of biographical sketches, anecdotes, and snapshots of philosophy at Oxford during the twentieth century. He has traced the connections, legacies, and disagreements among the philosophers, demonstrating how, over the years, pupils cam ... (read more)
Karen Green
Karen Green is a Professorial Fellow at the University of Melbourne and the author of A History of Women’s Political Thought in Europe, 1700-1800, Catharine Macaulay’s Republican Enlightenment, and Joan of Arc and Christine de Pizan’s Ditié (Cambridge University Press, 2014).
Ask anybody to name a philosopher and, chances are, if they can name one, it will be a man. Ask them to name a nineteenth-century British philosopher and they may be stumped, but if they can name one, it will be a man. This book on nineteenth-century women philosophers thus delves into the intersection of two areas of general ignorance.
Women have been virtually absent from the history of philoso ... (read more)