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  1. Paul Edwards (September 2, 1923 – December 9, 2004) was an Austrian-American moral philosopher. He was the editor-in-chief of MacMillan's eight-volume Encyclopedia of Philosophy from 1967, and lectured at New York University, Brooklyn College and the New School for Social Research from the 1960s to the 1990s.

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  3. Nov 5, 2015 · Paul Edwards (1923-2004) was a moral philosopher who wrote about the question of the meaning of life in his 1967 article "Why". He argued that how and why questions are not always distinct, that theological answers are not ultimate, and that the super-ultimate why question is not meaningless.

  4. Paul N. Edwards is part of Stanford Profiles, official site for faculty, postdocs, students and staff information (Expertise, Bio, Research, Publications, and more).

  5. Paul Edwards introduces the 8-volume encyclopedia of philosophy, the most comprehensive reference work in any language. He also reviews some journals and books related to philosophy and its history.

  6. Dec 3, 2015 · In “The Meaning and Value of Life” (1967) Paul Edwards to whom we have already been introduced, notes that many religious thinkers argue that life cannot have meaning unless our lives are part of a divine plan and at least some humans achieve eternal bliss.

  7. Paul Edwards (1923–2004) was an Austrian-born philosopher who was educated in Australia, but did most of his teaching in the United States, mainly at Columbia. Though perhaps best known as the editor-in-chief of the Macmillan <ITAL> Encyclopedia of Philosophy </ITAL> (1967), Edwards also wrote widely on topics in the philosophy of religion ...