A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, and a healthy helping of popular culture clears the cobwebs from Kant. Philosophy has had a bad public relations problem for a few centuries now. This series aims to change that, showing that philosophy is relevant to your life - and not just for answering the big questions like "To be or not to be?" but for answering the little questions, "To watch or not to watch South Park?" Thinking deeply about TV, movies, and music doesn't make you a "complete idiot." In fact it might make you a philosopher, someone who believes the unexamined life is not worth living and the unexamined cartoon is not worth watching.
The Blackwell Philosophy and Pop Culture Series (21)
by William Irwin
August 2010, Paperback
by William Irwin
June 2010, Paperback
by William Irwin, George Dunn, Rebecca Housel
June 2010, Paperback
by William Irwin (Series Editor), Mark D. White (Editor)
March 2010, Paperback
by William Irwin, Richard Brian Davis
by William Irwin (Series Editor), Jason P. Blahuta (Editor), Michel S. Beaulieu (Editor)
by William Irwin (Series Editor), Rebecca Housel (Editor), J. Jeremy Wisnewski (Editor)
by William Irwin (Series Editor), David K. Johnson (Editor)
August 2009, Paperback
by William Irwin, Richard Brown, Kevin S. Decker
by William Irwin (Editor), Rebecca Housel (Editor), J. Jeremy Wisnewski (Editor)
by William Irwin (Editor), Mark D. White (Editor)
by William Irwin (Editor), Henry Jacoby
by William Irwin (Series Editor), Mark D. White (Editor), Robert Arp (Editor)
by J. Jeremy Wisnewski (Editor)
March 2008, Paperback, Wiley-Blackwell
by Jason T. Eberl (Editor)
by Jennifer Hart Weed (Editor), Richard Brian Davis (Editor), Ronald Weed (Editor)
November 2007, Paperback, Wiley-Blackwell
by Sharon Kaye (Editor)
November 2007, Paperback, Wiley-Blackwell
by J. Jeremy Wisnewski (Editor)
August 2007, Paperback, Wiley-Blackwell
by William Irwin (Editor)
April 2007, Paperback, Wiley-Blackwell