British Journal for the History of Philosophy (BJHP) forthcoming Parallel, Additional, or Alternative Histories of Philosophy? Questions on the Theory and Methodology of the History of Philosophy Dr Sotiris Mitralexis Centre for Hellenic Studies, Princeton University & Philosophy Department, City University of Istanbul S Mitralexis, Princeton University, 107 Scheide Caldwell House, 08544 Princeton NJ USA T: +1 6093568131 / E: sotmitral@princeton.edu Abstract Methodologies and theories for writing histories of philosophy are particularly relevant today due to the abounding challenges to the discipline that have emerged: e.g., the problem concerning the precise mode of the inclusion of non-Western philosophies in the history of philosophy, the response to postcolonial considerations at large, the transformative impact of new media, and the question whether the history of philosophy is primarily a philosophical, rather than merely historical, enterprise. À propos the relative scarcity that is to be witnessed in explicit articulations of methodologies and theories for writing histories of philosophy, in this note I focus on certain spontaneous, rather than theoretically planned, responses that have emerged to the above challenges in particular Peter Adamson’s History of Philosophy without any gaps and in conclusion, as an example of methodological development, I touch on some of the problems we encounter in the case of the inclusion of Byzantine philosophy in the history of philosophy. Keywords: history of philosophy, methodology, non-Western, Byzantine philosophy, Peter Adamson This is a DRAFT. The DOI of the published paper will be: 10.1080/09608788.2018.1458281. Once the article has published online, it will be available at the following permanent link: https://doi.org/10.1080/09608788.2018.1458281 .