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Cover 67

Issue 67
May/June 2008

EDITORIAL

Our Furry Friends

by Rick Lewis

NEWS

Issue 67 May/June 2008

News reports by Sue Roberts.

ANIMALS

“I knew him by his voice”: Can Animals Be Our Friends?

Stephen Clark examines how far Aristotle’s concept of friendship might apply to animals, among themselves and between us and them.

Crabs

Peter Royle shows no vexation over Sartre’s crustacean fixation.

Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner? The controversial Peter Singer!

Charlotte Laws cautiously chows down with the Defender of Animals.

Hunting For Consistency

Angus Taylor argues that to be consistent, we must either exclude some humans from the moral community, or else include at least some animals.

Plato is my dog, yo!: Dogs, Love and Truth

Jeremy Barris enlists the help of Plato, Ortega and pragmatist philosophy to argue that love at its deepest is our connection with ultimate truth, and that this connection is found in our love for our dogs.

ARTICLES

Did Duchamp’s Urinal Flush Away Art?

Roy Turner scorns the fact that after Duchamp, critics have questioned the status of ‘traditional’ Western art, making the act of designation the sole determinant of art.

In Defense Of Dueling

Ryan Ruby intellectually attacks, feints and parries in favour of legally reinstating the duel as a means of settling personal disputes.

The Problem With Zombies

Rebecca Hanrahan says that just because you can imagine zombies doesn’t mean they’re possible, or that they can tell us anything about consciousness.

The Wood That Finds Itself A Violin

Yahia Lababidi contemplates the implacable calling to produce great works.

Is There A God?

The following readers’ answers to this central philosophical question each win a random book. The harvest was abundant, unsurprisingly; just sorry we couldn’t fit you all in. The votes were, loosely, Yes: 52%, No: 31%, and Don’t Know: 17%. So we’ll start with a ‘Yes’.

It Shouldn’t Happen to a Philosopher

Fiona Dalzell finds it hard being a philosophical vet.

CROSSWORD

Crossword

Our twenty-first frenzy of fiddled philosophical facts fantastically forced into a frame by Deiradiotes.

COLUMNS

Dear Socrates

Our celebrity columnist answers readers’ questions.

Turning The Tables: We Matter Because We Are Animals

by Joel Marks

From Loving To Wolfing

Peter Cave toys with love, sex and other objects.

Saving Truth

Raymond Tallis asserts the truth about the truth.

REVIEWS

Ancient Philosophy and Everyday Life by Trevor Curnow

Ralph Blumenau goes to ancient Greece with Trevor Curnow.

Capers in the Churchyard: Animal Rights Advocacy in the Age of Terror by Lee Hall

Joel Marks advocates animal rights with Lee Hall.

Horton Hears A Who!

Todd Walters is delighted to announce that the roles of Socrates and Galileo will be played by Horton and the Mayor of Whoville respectively.