[2] Louise Antony is married to fellow philosopher Joseph Levine and is the mother of Bay Area musician Rachel Lark.
[2] She has also edited and introduced three volumes: Philosophers Without Gods (Oxford University Press, 2007), a collection of essays by leading philosophers reflecting on their life without religious faith; Chomsky and His Critics, with Norbert Hornstein (Blackwell Publishing Company, 2003); and, with Charlotte Witt, A Mind of One's Own: Feminist Essays on Reason and Objectivity (Westview Press, 1993), which was expanded in 2002 in a second edition.
[6] Other selected essays include "Natures and Norms",[7] "Multiple Realization: Keeping it Real", "Atheism as Perfect Piety For the Love of Reason", "Everybody Has Got It: A Defense of Non-Reductive Materialism in the Philosophy of Mind", and, with Rebecca Hanrahan, "Because I Said So: Toward a Feminist Theory of Authority".
She wrote one of a series of articles in the New York Times's Opinionator column in the fall of 2013,[8] and in 2011 co-founded with Ann Cudd the Mentoring Project for Junior Women in Philosophy.
In 2008, Antony debated Christian apologist William Lane Craig on the topic "Is God Necessary for Morality?