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Epoché is a journal for the History of Philosophy. Committed to a pluralist orientation and dedicated to an exchange of diverse ideas and approaches, the journal especially supports articles that bring a continental or hermeneutic approach. Epoché considers the history and tradition of philosophy to be an essential part of contemporary philosophical discourse. Open to all areas and thematics arising out of the History of Philosophy, it welcomes articles that take up historical, critical, and deconstructive approaches to the great philosophical debates surrounding religion and God, metaphysics, questions of human knowledge and conduct, and of language and aesthetics. Finally, Epoché also welcomes relevant submissions on the philosophy of history and the question of how to read the History of Philosophy.
Spring 2003 Issue, Volume 7-2 |