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  1. William Wallace Irwin (1803 – September 15, 1856) was Mayor of Pittsburgh and a Whig member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. Early life. William Irwin was born in Pittsburgh in 1803, and as a boy earned the lifelong nickname "pony Irwin" because of his habit of riding a pony everywhere he went.

  2. William Irwin (born 1970) is Professor of Philosophy at King's College in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania and is best known for originating the "philosophy and popular culture" book genre with Seinfeld and Philosophy: A Book about Everything and Nothing in 1999 and The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D'oh! of Homer in 2001.

  3. William W. Irvin (April 5, 1779 – March 27, 1842) also spelled Irwin was a 19th-century lawyer, farmer, politician, and two-term U.S. Representative from Ohio from 1829 to 1833.

  4. If you’ve heard of Game of Thrones and Philosophy, Terminator and Philosophy, or, going back a little, The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D’Oh! of Homer, then you’ve heard of William Irwin. PT: Professor Irwin, you are perhaps best known as the originator of the Philosophy and Popular Culture genre.

  5. Books. Critical Thinking: A Student's Introduction. Gregory Bassham, James M. Wallace, William Irwin, Henry Nardone. McGraw-Hill Education, Sep 5, 2012 - Philosophy - 544 pages. Bassham's...

    • 5, illustrated
    • Critical Thinking: A Student's Introduction
    • McGraw-Hill Education, 2012
  6. But William Irwin is not afraid of the conversation of philosophers, and challenges the reader to follow him through a tour de force whose goal is to show us that “capitalism and existentialism are compatible” and hence that “a minimal state with a truly free market would be a worthy option.”

  7. Nov 2, 2015 · William Irwin is a professor of philosophy at Kings College, the author of “The Free Market Existentialist: Capitalism Without Consumerism” and the general editor of the Blackwell...