Australasian Journal of Philosophy
The Australasian Journal of Philosophy is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal of philosophy and "one of the oldest English-language philosophy journals in the world". It was established in 1923 as The Australasian Journal of Psychology and Philosophy, obtaining its current title in 1947.
It is published by Routledge on behalf of the Australasian Association of Philosophy. In 2007, it was rated "A" in the European Reference Index in the Humanities. It is abstracted and indexed by the Arts and Humanities Citation Index, Historical Abstracts, Scopus, Philosopher's Index, ProQuest databases, and Current Contents/Arts & Humanities.
History
Continuously published since its foundation in 1923 – with all members of the Australasian Association of Psychology and Philosophy receiving copies of the journal free of charge as a perquisite of their membership – it was published quarterly from 1923 until 1937, and triannually from 1938 to 1978, except for the period from 1943 to 1947, when limited war-time supplies restricted the publication to only two issues a year.It resumed quarterly publication in 1979. Originally published by the Australasian Association of Psychology and Philosophy itself, it switched to Oxford University Press in 1998. Since 2005, the journal has been published by Routledge.
Editors-in-chief
The following persons have been editor-in-chief:- 1923–1926: Francis Anderson
- 1927–1934: H. Tasman Lovell
- 1935 –1946: John Anderson
- 1947 –1949: John Passmore
- 1950–1967: A.K. Stout
- 1968–1972 Graham Nerlich
- 1973–1977: Robert Brown
- 1978–1989: Brian Ellis
- 1990–1997: Robert Young
- 1998–2001: Fred D'Agostino, Peter Forrest, Gerry Gaus
- 2002–2007: Maurice Goldsmith
- December 2007 – December 2013: Stewart Candlish
- December 2013 – March 2022: Stephen Hetherington
- March 2022 - present: Antony Eagle
Notable articles
To celebrate the ninetieth volume of the journal, a "virtual special issue" was released in 2012, containing links to ten articles from past issues selected by then editor-in-chief Stewart Candlish. According to the Web of Science, the following three articles have been cited most frequently :The most published authors were J.J.C. Smart, David Lewis and John Mackie, reflecting the generally analytic focus that the Journal has maintained since its early idealist days.