Preserving an engaging, little-known slice of American life, "The Dark Side of Hopkinsville" is a collection of ten picaresque tales bearing witness to a black child's life in a southern town at the turn of the century.
Born and reared in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, Ted Poston (1906-1974) became the first black career-long reporter for a major metropolitan daily (the "New York Post") and served as a member of Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Negro Cabinet" in Washington in 1940. After thirty-five years at the "Post," Poston was without question the "Dean of Black Journalists."
Acquainted with the...
Preserving an engaging, little-known slice of American life, "The Dark Side of Hopkinsville" is a collection of ten picaresque tales bearing witnes...
In this new explanationist account of epistemic justification, Poston argues that the explanatory virtues provide all the materials necessary for a plausible account of justified belief. There are no purely autonomous reasons. Rather reasons occur only within an explanatory coherent set of beliefs.
In this new explanationist account of epistemic justification, Poston argues that the explanatory virtues provide all the materials necessary for a pl...