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Your text looks like this. This is in Times New Roman 12 pt in default black, but if you don’t have Times New Roman, use any other plain and simple font. The Word settings are automatically contained in this template, but if you need to know them, they are: paper size A4 (height 21 cm, width 29.7cm), mirror margins (Top 1.5cm, Inside 3.0cm, Gutter 0.0cm, Bottom 1.0cm, Outside 3.0cm), headers and footers at 0.5cm with automatic page numbering at bottom right.

Please do not adjust any of the settings in this template, and please do not apply any macros or layout rules in addition to those already in it.

Subtitles look like this, in 12pt bold

Note that there is no extra spacing between the subtitle and the text. Please use the following conventions for body text: single line spacing, sentences separated by two spaces, paragraphs separated by two returns, emphasis in italics only (not capitals, bold or underlining), “full quotation marks” to be reserved only for actual referenced quotes (and not for proper nouns or terms such as the ‘New Humean School’, which should be in single inverted commas or left naked[1]), footnotes[2] to be preferred to endnotes[i](and please use one or the other, not both), and standard referencing format. Text is left-aligned and not justified – this is intentional.

Standard referencing format works as follows

We would like all references to be in a standard format, so in the text please write, for example: Psillos argues that Hume’s own view of causation has been widely misunderstood (2002: 238). It is also perfectly permissible, of course, to refer to the title in the text, as in: In Causation and Explanation (2002: 238), Psillos argues that Hume’s own view of causation has been widely misunderstood. If you wish to refer to a website, please include the author, the title of the article, the URL and the date that it was accessed.

In a footnote or endnote: Psillos, Stathis 2002: 238, and in the Reference section:

Psillos, Stathis Causation and Explanation Acumen, London 2002

Please quote as follows

Psillos says “All causation is nomological; c causes e iff there is a law that connects events like c with events like e” (2002: 77). Or you can footnote or endnote the quote to a standard reference, as just above. Longer quotes, or those you wish to stand out from the run of the text, should be indented.

If appropriate to your piece, please provide a References section with sources actually used in the piece, rather than a long reading list on the subject area. You can of course recommend reading, but if you do, please call it Recommended Reading or similar, and keep it short and relevant. References go at the end of your piece, and should be an alphabetically ordered list using standard referencing as above (see below).

Philosophical symbols are, of course, perfectly permissible. You will find them (in Word) in Insert/Symbol. For example: [ ] { }      . Diagrams are permissible. It is usually best to produce them in Powerpoint and edit them into your document. (See p74 of the 2010 Review for an example).

Please take the time to check spelling, syntax and style before submitting. For those whose first language is not English, the Editor promises to offer every assistance.

Recommended reading

Martinich, AP Philosophical Writing Blackwell, Oxford 2005 is an excellent and widely used guide to good writing in philosophy.

Weston, Anthony A Rulebook for Arguments Hackett, Indianapolis 2009 is a superb guide to constructing a strong argument – and to demolishing the arguments of one’s opponents.

References

Psillos, Stathis Causation and Explanation Acumen, London 2002

Thank you

Bob Stone and Peter Gibson

2014 Editors

[1]This is a rule that even book and journal publishers often ignore. The Review will not be joining them.

[2]Footnotes are permissible, and should look like this. This is in the same font as the text, but in 10pt.

[i]

Endnotes look like this. This is in 10pt, but you are free to increase the point size if you use them to explain and expand on the text. Please try not to write a second essay in the endnotes; they do count towards the word limit.