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期刊名称:ERGO-AN OPEN ACCESS JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY

ISSN:23304014
出版社:MICHIGAN PUBLISHING, 839 GREENE ST, ANN ARBOR, USA, MI, 48104
  出版社网址:https://www.publishing.umich.edu
期刊网址:https://www.ergophiljournal.org
主题范畴:PHILOSOPHY
变更情况:Newly Added by 2019

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Ergo is an open access philosophy journal accepting submissions on all philosophical topics and from all philosophical traditions. This includes, among other things: history of philosophy, work in both the analytic and continental traditions, as well as formal and empirically informed philosophy. Ergo is strongly committed to diversity and especially welcomes submissions from members of groups currently underrepresented in philosophy.

Submission and publication are free, and authors retain copyright under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 license. This arrangement is made possible by generous support from the Syracuse University College of Arts and Sciences, the Syracuse University Libraries, the Syracuse University Philosophy Department.

Papers are published as they are accepted; there is no regular publication schedule.


Instructions to Authors

Submission Guidelines

Submitted manuscripts should be PDF files prepared for anonymous review, containing no identifying information.

Submissions need not conform to the journal style unless and until accepted for publication.

There is no word limit, but submissions on the lengthier side should have correspondingly more news value.

To submit a paper, please register and login to Ergo’s editorial management system at https://www.ergosubmissions.org/signup.


Accepted Papers

Accepted papers must be adapted to the journal’s house style. The final document should be a Word file (.doc or .docx) or a well-formatted LaTeX file using Ergo's custom class. LaTeX commands should be restricted to those supported by MathJax. The text should be structured consistently. The name and affiliation of the contributor(s) should appear at the top, along with an abstract of 150 to 250 words.


Ergo follows APA Style (6th edition) with the following exceptions:

In-text citations: The author-date system should be used. The author's last name (if not explicitly mentioned in the text) is followed by the year of publication, a colon, and the unabbreviated page numbers. If several works are mentioned within the same in-text reference, they are separated by a semicolon.

Example: (Anscombe 1958: 13; Lewis 1980: 264–270)

Authors who want their in-text citations rendered as hyperlinks to the list of references must, if submitting a .doc/.docx file, color all in-text citations so that they can be identified during production. (Authors submitting .tex files can ignore this step.) Blue, or any color not used for another purpose elsewhere in the text, will do. We strongly encourage authors to make their in-text citations linkable, but it is not required.

References in footnotes and the References list: Authors’ first names are spelled out. Initials are only used for middle names. The order of forename and surname should only be reversed at the very beginning of an entry, whereas all other names in an entry are written with the forename first. If a work has multiple authors or editors, the word and should be written before the last contributor’s name. At the beginning of the entry or in lists with three or more names, the word and is always preceded by a comma.

The place of publication should be omitted in references to books. In references to articles in periodicals, the issue number must be indicated, whether the journal is paginated by issue or not.

Page numbers are never introduced by p. or pp.

Examples:

  • Anscombe, Gertrude E. M. (1958). Modern Moral Philosophy. Philosophy, 33(124), 1–19.
  • Arendt, Hannah (1977). Public Rights and Private Interests. In Michael Mooney and Florian Stuber (Eds.), Small Comforts for Hard Times: Humanists on Public Policy (103–108). Columbia University Press.
  • Barcan Marcus, Ruth (1993). Modalities: Philosophical Essays. Oxford University Press.
  • Beauvoir, Simone de (1989). Merleau-Ponty and Pseudo-Sartreanism (Veronique Zaytzeff and Frederick Morrison, Trans.). International Studies in Philosophy, 21(3), 33–48.
  • Descartes, René (1985–91). The Philosophical Writings of Descartes (Vols. 1–3). Eds. and trans. John Cottingham, Robert Stoothof, Dugald Murdoch, and Anthony Kenny. Cambridge University Press.
  • Lewis, David K. (1986). A Subjectivist’s Guide to Objective Chance. In David K. Lewis (Ed.), Philosophical Papers (Vol. 2, 83–113). (Reprinted from Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability, Vol. 2, 263–293, by Richard C. Jeffrey, Ed., 1980, University of Berkeley Press).
  • Whitehead, Alfred N. and Bertrand Russell (1963). Principia Mathematica (2nd ed., reprint, Vol. 2). Cambridge University Press.

Capitalization of headlines, titles, and subtitles: In headlines and when citing titles and subtitles of other works in the English language, consistently capitalize as follows:

Capitalize all nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and subordinating conjunctions.

Do not capitalize articles, prepositions, coordinating conjunctions, or the to in infinitives unless they are the first word in a headline, title, or subtitle. Sections should be numbered.

Acknowledgements and figures: Acknowledgments should appear in their own section before the references. Figures should use fonts that match the main text (Palatino for HTML, Sabon for PDF).

Author note: Contrary to APA rules, Ergo does not demand and will not print author notes containing the authors’ contact information.

Endnotes are not accepted and should be replaced by footnotes.

For any further stylistic concerns, consult the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th edition. In particular, see section 4.15 for capitalization in titles and headlines, section 4.21 for the use of italics, as well as pages 70 to 76 for the avoidance of discriminating language.

British English or American English may be used, but either one should be followed consistently throughout the article. If the text is written in American English, spelling should conform to American English as exemplified in Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (2005) or Webster’s Third New International Dictionary(2002). If the text is written in British English, spelling should conform to the Oxford English Dictionary (1989), and Oxford spelling (-ize instead of -ise) should be used.


Editorial Board

Managing Editors

  • Ben Bradley (Syracuse University)
  • Kevan Edwards (Syracuse University)
  • Nicholas Jones (University of Birmingham)
  • Nin Kirkham (University of Western Australia)
  • Anne Schwenkenbecher (Murdoch University)
  • Alastair Wilson (University of Birmingham)
  • ergo.editors@gmail.com

Area Editors

  • Michael Almeida (University of Texas at San Antonio)
  • Jacob Beck (York University)
  • Corine Besson (University of Sussex)
  • Michael Blome-Tillmann (McGill University)
  • Gwen Bradford (Rice University)
  • R. A. Briggs (Stanford University)
  • John Brunero (University of Nebraska at Lincoln)
  • Mazviita Chirimuuta (University of Pittsburgh)
  • Michael Cholbi (California State Polytechnic University, Pomona)
  • Stephanie Collins (Australian Catholic University)
  • Juan Comesaña (University of Arizona)
  • Sam Cowling (Denison University)
  • Vincenzo Crupi (University of Turin)
  • Helen De Cruz (Saint Louis University)
  • Joshua Dever (University of Texas at Austin)
  • Esa Díaz-León (University of Barcelona)
  • Tyler Doggett (University of Vermont)
  • Zoe Drayson (University of California at Davis)
  • Julia Driver (Washington University in St. Louis)
  • Stewart Duncan (University of Florida)
  • Corey Dyck (University of Western Ontario)
  • Kenny Easwaran (Texas A&M)
  • Kyla Ebels-Duggan (Northwestern University)
  • Matti Eklund (Uppsala University)
  • Stephen Finlay (University of Southern California)
  • Laura Franklin-Hall (New York University)
  • Mikkel Gerken (University of Southern Denmark)
  • Cody Gilmore (University of California at Davis)
  • Keren Gorodeisky (Auburn University)
  • Aidan Gray (University of Illinois at Chicago)
  • Pamela Hieronymi (University of California at Los Angeles)
  • Thomas Hofweber (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
  • Ole Hjortland (University of Bergen)
  • Andrew Huddleston (Birkbeck, University of London)
  • Jonathan Jenkins Ichikawa (University of British Columbia)
  • Hanne Jacobs (Loyola University Chicago)
  • Serene Khader (CUNY Graduate Center and Brooklyn College)
  • Colin Klein (Macquarie University)
  • Michelle Kosch (Cornell University)
  • Klaas Kraay (Ryerson University)
  • Shen-yi Liao (University of Pugent Sound)
  • David Liebesman (University of Calgary)
  • Clayton Littlejohn (King’s College London)
  • Ofra Magidor (University of Oxford)
  • Marko Malink (New York University)
  • Julia Markovits (Cornell University)
  • Adrienne Martin (Claremont McKenna College)
  • Kristopher McDaniel (Syracuse University)
  • Colin McLear (University of Nebraska-Lincoln)
  • Lionel McPherson (Tufts University)
  • Emily McTernan (University College London)
  • Aaron Meskin (University of Leeds)
  • Kristie Miller (University of Sydney)
  • Christopher Mole (University of British Columbia)
  • Jennifer Morton (City College of New York, Graduate Center-CUNY)
  • Jennifer Nagel (University of Toronto)
  • Alyssa Ney (University of California at Davis)
  • Jill North (Rutgers University)
  • Cailin O’Connor (University of California at Irvine)
  • Christiana Olfert (Tufts University)
  • Matt Parrott (University of Birmingham)
  • Sarah Paul (University of Wisconsin at Madison)
  • Dario Perinetti (Université du Québec à Montréal)
  • Richard Pettigrew (Bristol University)
  • Martin Pickavé (University of Toronto)
  • Bryan Pickel (University of Edinburgh)
  • Theron Pummer (University of St. Andrews)
  • Bernard Reginster (Brown University)
  • Sarah Robins (University of Kansas)
  • Stephan Schmid (Universität Hamburg)
  • Neil Sinclair (University of Nottingham)
  • Paulina Sliwa (University of Cambridge)
  • Shannon Spaulding (Oklahoma State University)
  • Quayshawn Spencer (University of Pennsylvania)
  • Kai Spiekermann (London School of Economics)
  • Susanne Sreedhar (Boston University)
  • Isidora Stojanovic (Institut Jean Nicod)
  • Jussi Suikkanen (University of Birmingham)
  • Kate Thomson-Jones (Oberlin College)
  • Patrick Tomlin (University of Warwick)
  • Pekka Väyrynen (University of Leeds)
  • Barbara Vetter (Freie Universität Berlin)
  • Matthew Weiner (University of Vermont)
  • Malte Willer (University of Chicago)
  • Robbie Williams (University of Leeds)
  • Katherine A. Withy (Georgetown University)
  • Richard Zach (University of Calgary)
  • Jiji Zhang (Lingnan University)
  • Kevin Zollman (Carnegie Mellon University)



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