Philosophers' Imprint

Philosophers' Imprint is a refereed philosophy journal.

Philosophers' Imprint
DisciplinePhilosophy
LanguageEnglish
Edited byAndrew Arana, et al.
Publication details
History2001–present
Publisher
Michigan Publishing (U.S.)
FrequencyIrregular
Yes
LicenseCC-BY-NC-ND
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Philos.' Impr.
Indexing
ISSN1533-628X
LCCN2001-212257
OCLC no.45826937
Links

The journal was launched by University of Michigan Philosophy professors Stephen Darwall (now at Yale University) and J. David Velleman (now at New York University). In 2000, Darwall and Velleman approached Michigan's librarians with the goal of starting a small revolution in academic philosophy publishing. They hoped that publishing philosophical research online could significantly reduce the amount of time between submission and publication from what was then typical in professional journals.[1] The university's librarians, incentivized by the rising costs of subscribing to academic journals, in turn drew on their expertise in managing digital content to collaborate with the editors to produce a journal from within the library, calling the resulting operation The Scholarly Publishing Office.[2] The editors of Philosophers' Imprint recognized that by publishing an academic journal online, they could also make research available to everyone with internet access, “including students and teachers in developing countries, as well as members of the general public.”[3]

Originally edited by Darwall and Velleman, Philosophers' Imprint is now co-edited by a team of thirteen philosophers, advised by an international editorial board.[4] The journal ranked in the top ten of all general philosophy journals in a unscientific poll of philosophers conducted in 2012.[5]

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
gollark: I think so.
gollark: Idea: also make it able to scan maps, regular printed books, maybe enchanted books, sort of thing.
gollark: If so, just say that you're... using a general-purpose hardware neural network implementation... to... store inputted data and rewrite it on other media.
gollark: By that do you mean "remember the text and typing it out again"?
gollark: Or we could just use modems.

References

  1. Bonn, Maria (2017). "Editor's Note". The Journal of Electronic Publishing. 20 (1). doi:10.3998/3336451.0020.100.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  2. Hawkins, Kevin S. (2012). "Promoting Diversity and Sustainability in the Scholarly Publishing Ecosystem: The University of Michigan's MPublishing Redefines the Role of Libraries in Publishing". Educational Technology. 52 (6): 8–10.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  3. Ludlow, Peter (February 25, 2013). "Aaron Swartz Was Right". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
  4. https://www.philosophersimprint.org/about.html
  5. Huber, Franz; Weisberg, Jonathan (2014). "Introducing Ergo". Ergo, an Open Access Journal of Philosophy. 1 (20200523). doi:10.3998/ergo.12405314.0001.000.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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