Submissions
PLEASE READ THE 'IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT'
ON THE HOME PAGE BEFORE PROCEEDING FURTHER
Unsolicited
Contributions
To be considered for publication, Unsolicited
Contributions (Articles and Discussion Notes) must meet the
following minimum standard and be submitted as a
single copy to the Editor
by email attachment, preferably as an rtf file. (No printed copy is
necessary. However, where authors have used special characters such
as logical symbols or European accents, they should take the
precaution of attaching a pdf file as well to ensure that the Editor
receives an accurate representation of the intended text.) Authors
who submit only a pdf file must provide a word
count.
Minimum Standard
There must be in a separate
file a covering note which must include the title of the paper and
all useful contact information — email address, fax and phone
numbers, postal address, etc. Submissions must be in English,
formatted to be double-spaced with margins of not less than 25mm, an
A4 page size, and automatic page numbering. A short abstract at the
beginning of the paper is required. Authors should take special note
of the Journal's policy on word limits: see Editorial Policy.
Typescripts must be carefully
proof-read prior to submission so that referees do not have their
time wasted in identifying and listing errors.
In order to
facilitate dispassionate refereeing, neither the name(s) of the
author(s) nor any institutional affiliation may be shown in thepaper
itself, and all references to an author's own work(s) must be
disguised (e.g. by being made in an impersonal and neutral form) or
omitted. Extravagant acknowledgements of gratitude must likewise be
omitted. Authors who write in Word must use the Save As facility and
choose the Option 'Remove personal information from this file on
save'. Self-identifying references may be restored after the
evaluation process is complete.
The Editor requires that
all the above conditions are met as a minimum standard
before the paper is considered.
Although
submissions meeting only the above minimum standard will be
considered for publication, it is Editorial Policy that any submission which is
accepted for publication must immediately be brought into conformity
with the more exacting standards of Journal
Style. That is, when a paper has been accepted, the author(s)
will be required to supply a final electronic version which so
conforms. Publication will not otherwise be proceeded with.
Solicited Contributions
Solicited
Contributions (Reviews etc.) and correspondence concerning them
should be sent to the Book
Review Editor. Apart from the anonymity conditions, these too
must meet, initially, the Journal's minimum standard (above), and
eventually, Journal Style (below).
Journal Style
Layout Style
Authors should not attempt to reproduce the
appearance of the printed version of the Journal. But the following
general pattern should be followed in production of a final version
for the Editor:
TITLE
Author's Name
Abstract
Main
Text*
Institutional Affiliation
REFERENCES
Endnotes
(will be converted to footnotes by publisher)
[*The Main
Text should be divided into convenient sections with roman numerals
for each section and letters for sub-sections. For
example:
I. Introduction
Some
text.
II. What Does a Logical Constant
Mean?
A. The Core Tenets of Inferential Role
Semantics
Some more text.]
Text
Style
Acronyms are deprecated. Unmemorable acronyms are
prohibited.
The Oxford English Dictionary's version of UK
usage is the Journal's normal standard for spelling; any spellchecker
should be set to UK English, but the Journal follows
the OED's preference for '...ize' over '...ise'. Quotations should
follow the spelling of the quoted source.
Substantial
quotations (40 words or more) should be indented without quotation
marks. Other quotations should be enclosed by single quotation marks.
Double quotation marks should be used only in the following ways: as
inner quotation marks within single quotation marks, for example, for
quotations within quotations; and to enable the exact reproduction of
quoted material (i.e. where a quoted author has himself used them).
Closing punctuation belonging to quoted text should be shown inside
the quotation marks.
Format for left justification only and
disable any hyphenization programme.
The AJP uses an
author-date system of citations. The date used in the main text and
footnotes should be that of the edition used. Anachronism and
absurdity (such as 'Kant 1979') should be minimized, where possible,
by indicating in the Bibliography the date of original publication
(as, e.g., in the 'Edited Text' example shown below). References
should be given in square brackets in the text whenever possible.
Footnotes should be substantive; those merely giving citations should
be avoided.
Citations should appear in the text in the
following form: [author's surname(s)
year: page number(s) if any],
as [Lycan 2001: 25 – 9]; [Black 2002: 159, 161 – 3;
Goldman 1994: 107; Velleman 1995]. Note that there is no comma
between author and date, and page numbers (if any) are set off from
the date by a colon. Several works by an author in the same year
should be distinguished by adding a lower case letter to the date, as
[Jones 1999a: 23], [Jones 1999b]. Where the author's name is
mentioned in the text or in a note, followed closely by a citation,
the author's name may be omitted from the citation, e.g., 'Bloggs
denies that colours are primary qualities [1997: 234 – 7].'
'Ibid.' (in romans) may be used. 'Op. cit.' should
not.
Bibliography: a final alphabetical list, titled
'REFERENCES', must be included, and items must be formatted according
to the following examples:
ARTICLE:
Black, Tim 2002. A Moorean Response to Brain-in-a-Vat Scepticism,
Australasian Journal of Philosophy 80/2: 148 – 63.
BOOK:
Hylton, Peter 2007. Quine, London
and New York: Routledge.
Devitt, Michael and
Kim Sterelny 1987. Language and Reality: An Introduction to the
Philosophy of Language, Oxford: Blackwell.
CHAPTER IN A BOOK:
Beall, J. C. 2007. Truth and Paradox: A Philosophical Sketch, in
Philosophy of Logic, ed. Dale Jacquette, Amsterdam:
North-Holland: 325 – 410.
Jones, Karen 2005. Moral Epistemology, in The Oxford
Handbook of Contemporary Philosophy, ed. Frank Jackson and
Michael Smith, Oxford: Oxford University Press: 63 – 85.
EDITED BOOK:
Horton, Keith
and Haig Patapan, eds, 2004. Globalisation and Equality,
London and New York: Routledge.
EDITED TEXT:
Hume,
D. 1974 (1747). A Treatise of Human Nature, ed.
P. Nidditch, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
ONLINE PUBLICATION:
Candlish, Stewart 2007. The Identity Theory of Truth,
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2007
Edition), ed. Edward N. Zalta, URL =
<http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2007/entries/truth-identity/>
Note that titles of
journal articles and chapters in books are not in quotes. Titles of
books and journals are given in italics. Volume numbers of journals
are given in Arabic numerals. Both the city of publication and the
publisher are given for books. Where more than one work by the same
person is listed, the author's name should be repeated in the list
(rather than replaced by dashes).
Endnote Style
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