Reviews

  • From Cabbages to Kings: The Narrowing of the Overton Window. Review of Mark Mercer’s In Praise of Dangerous Universities And Other Essays. Society for Academic Freedom and Scholarship
  • Review of Jessica Wooten Wilson’s Walker Percy, Fyodor Dostoevsky, and the Search for Influence and Reading Walker Percy. Southern Literary Review
  • Brian Smith’s Walker Percy and the Politics of the Wayfarer.
  • Lawrence N. Powell’s The Accidental City: Improvising New Orleans, Harvard University Press. Cosmos + Taxis 4:2+3.
  • Daniel Dennett: Sweet Dreams: Philosophical Obstacles to a Science of Consciousness in Daniel Dennett, Edited by John Symons, Routledge, Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers
  • Critical Notice of Butterfly in the Typewriter: The Tragic Life of John Kennedy Toole and the Remarkable Story of A Confederacy of Dunces by Cory MacLauchlin.
  • Review of Michael Wheeler: Reconstructing the cognitive world: the next step. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences Volume 7, Number 1 / March
  • Daniel Dennett: Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon, Journal of Mind and Behavior (Spring 2007)
  • Robert Wilson, Boundaries of the Mind: The Individual in the Fragile Sciences – Cognition. Philosophical Psychology Volume 19 (2006), issue 5
  • A History of Political Experience. Michael Oakeshott, Lectures in the History of Political Thought, European Journal of Political Theory, October, Volume 5, No. 4, pp. 504-510
  • Dewey: the first ghost-buster? W. Teed Rockwell, Neither Brain nor Ghost: A Nondualist Alternative to the Mind-Brain Identity Theory. Trends in Cognitive Science, Volume 10, Issue 6, pp. 242-243 (June)
  • Daniel Dennett, Sweet Dreams: Philosophical Obstacles to a Science of Consciousness. Journal of Mind and Behavior, Vol. 26 No. 3 Summer, pp. 207-214
  • Andy Clark, Natural-Born Cyborgs: Minds, Technologies, and the Future of Human Intelligence. Cognitive Systems Research, Volume 6, Issue 3, (December). pp. 405-409
  • Efraim Podoksik, In Defence of Modernity: Vision and Philosophy in Michael Oakeshott. Political Studies Review. Volume 2, Issue 3, September, pp. 337-338