Citation
Irwin, William and Richard B. Davis (eds.). Alice in Wonderland and Philosophy: Curiouser and Curiouser. Toronto: Wiley, 2010.
Table of Contents
Introduction: You’re Late for a Very Important Date – Part One: “Wake Up, Alice Dear” – Unruly Alice: A Feminist View of Some Adventures in Wonderland / Megan S. Lloyd – Jam Yesterday, Jam Tomorrow, but Never Jam Today: On Procrastination, Hiking, and … the Spice Girls? / Mark D. White – Nuclear Strategists in Wonderland / Ron Hirschbein – You’re Nothing but a Pack of Cards!”: Alice Doesn’t Have a Social Contract / Dennis Knepp – Part Two: “That’s Logic” – “Six Impossible Things before Breakfast!” / George A. Dunn and Brian McDonald – Reasoning Down the Rabbit-Hole: Logical Lessons in Wonderland / David S. Brown – Three Ways of Getting It Wrong: Induction in Wonderland / Brendan Shea – Is There Such a Thing as a Language? / Daniel Whiting – Part Three: “We’re All Mad Here” – Alice, Perception, and Reality: Jell-O Mistaken for Stones / Robert Arp – How Deep Does the Rabbit-Hole Go?: Drugs and Dreams, Perception and Reality / Scott F. Parker – Perspectives and Tragedy: A Nietzschean Interpretation of Alice’s Adventure / Rick Mayock – Wishing It Were Some Other Time: The Temporal Passage of Alice / Mark W. Westmoreland – Part Four: “Who In The World Am I?” – Serious Nonsense / Charles Taliaferro and Elizabeth Olson – “Memory and Muchness”: Alice and the Philosophy of Memory / Tyler Shores
Publisher
John Wiley
Copyright Notice
Copyright, John Wiley. All rights reserved.
Rights License
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License