History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps

A podcast by Peter Adamson - Sundays

Sundays

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463 Episodes

  1. HoP 280 - Get to the Point - Fourteenth Century Physics

    Published: 18/06/2017
  2. HoP 279 - Quadrivial Pursuits - the Oxford Calculators

    Published: 4/06/2017
  3. HoP 278 - Sara Uckelman on Obligations

    Published: 21/05/2017
  4. HoP 277 - Trivial Pursuits - Fourteenth Century Logic

    Published: 7/05/2017
  5. HoP 276 - Back to the Future - Foreknowledge and Predestination

    Published: 23/04/2017
  6. HoP 275 - Keeping it Real - Responses to Ockham

    Published: 9/04/2017
  7. HoP 274 - Susan Brower-Toland on Ockham's Philosophy of Mind

    Published: 26/03/2017
  8. HoP 273 - What Do You Think? - Ockham on Mental Language

    Published: 12/03/2017
  9. HoP 272 - A Close Shave - Ockham’s Nominalism

    Published: 26/02/2017
  10. HoP 271 - Do As You’re Told - Ockham on Ethics and Political Philosophy

    Published: 12/02/2017
  11. HoP 270 - Render unto Caesar - Marsilius of Padua

    Published: 29/01/2017
  12. Democracy and the History of Philosophy

    Published: 21/01/2017
  13. HoP 269 - Our Power is Real - The Clash of Church and State

    Published: 15/01/2017
  14. HoP 268 - To Hell and Back - Dante Alighieri

    Published: 1/01/2017
  15. HoP 267 - After Virtue - Marguerite Porete

    Published: 18/12/2016
  16. HoP 266 - Tom Pink on the Will

    Published: 4/12/2016
  17. HoP 265 - Time of the Signs - the Fourteenth Century

    Published: 20/11/2016
  18. HoP 264 - Giorgio Pini on Scotus on Knowledge

    Published: 6/11/2016
  19. HoP 263 - One in a Million - Scotus on Universals and Individuals

    Published: 23/10/2016
  20. HoP 262 - On Command - Scotus on Ethics

    Published: 9/10/2016

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Peter Adamson, Professor of Philosophy at the LMU in Munich and at King’s College London, takes listeners through the history of philosophy, ”without any gaps.” The series looks at the ideas, lives and historical context of the major philosophers as well as the lesser-known figures of the tradition. www.historyofphilosophy.net. NOTE: iTunes shows only the most recent 300 episodes; subscribe on iTunes or go to a different platform for the whole series.

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