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Abstract
Here, in our third volume of Anamnesis, we faced the challenge of continuing a journal that was envisioned by founders who have since graduated. Their mission was to create a rigorous, lively and accessible undergraduate philosophy journal, and we believe we have honored this in the most recent volume. Hefty thinking took place, and in many places. From the Continental camp, we have an account of Giorgio Agamben's politics and an Arendtian interpretation of justice in Plato's Republic. On the Analytic side we present a discussion of identity. We conclude with an interview about whiteness in the United States with philosopher Linda Martín Alcoff. As this publication grows, we hope it will continue to attract students who are pulled by life's most mysterious questions. This included "Thinking Towards Justice: Hannah Arendt on Plato and the crisis of moral relativism" by Sara Fleming, "Beyond Categorization: Giorgio Agamben's new forms of political appearance" by Carson Fritz, and "Crisis on Infinite Earths: Identity after the defeat of descriptivism" by Paige O'Connor.