•  29
    Una introducción al simposio de platón
    Ideas Y Valores 59 (143): 189-205. 2010.
  •  256
    Nietzsche, life as literature
    Harvard University Press. 1985.
    Argues that Nietzsche tried to create a specific literary character in his writings and discusses the paradoxes of his work
  •  77
    For much of its history, philosophy was not merely a theoretical discipline but a way of life, an "art of living." This practical aspect of philosophy has been much less dominant in modernity than it was in ancient Greece and Rome, when philosophers of all stripes kept returning to Socrates as a model for living. The idea of philosophy as an art of living has survived in the works of such major modern authors as Montaigne, Nietzsche, and Foucault. Each of these writers has used philosophical dis…Read more
  •  114
    Is Living an Art that Can be Taught?
    Journal of Philosophical Research 40 (Supplement): 81-91. 2015.
    Along with our inordinate emphasis on managing our lives on the basis of impartial principles and rules, we have lost the sense that some of the greatest human achievements are accomplished precisely by going beyond anything that existing rules and principles allow. Along with our fixation on the values of morality and politics, which apply to everyone on the basis of our similarities to one another, we have lost the sense that there are also values that depend on our differences and distinguish…Read more
  • Richard Shusterman ueber Freude und aesthetische Erfahrung
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 47 (1): 105-110. 1999.
  •  430
    Plato and the Mass Media
    The Monist 71 (2): 214-234. 1988.
  •  190
    It is said that when Socrates is made to ask questions like "What is the pious and what the impious?", "What is courage?", or "What is the beautiful?", he is asking for the definition of a universal. For the "average" Greek of his time, however, this is a radically new question about a radically new sort of object, and Socrates’ interlocutors do not understand it. They usually answer it as if it were a different, if related, question: they tend to provide concrete instances of the universal in q…Read more
  •  88
    Aristotle's "Rhetoric": Philosophical Essays (edited book)
    with David J. Furley
    Princeton University Press. 2015.
    In the field of philosophy, Plato's view of rhetoric as a potentially treacherous craft has long overshadowed Aristotle's view, which focuses on rhetoric as an independent discipline that relates in complex ways to dialectic and logic and to ethics and moral psychology. This volume, composed of essays by internationally renowned philosophers and classicists, provides the first extensive examination of Aristotle's Rhetoric and its subject matter in many years. One aim is to locate both Aristotle'…Read more
  •  93
    The Material Word: Some Theories of Language and Its Limits
    with David Silverman and Brian Torode
    Philosophical Review 90 (1): 122. 1981.
  •  142
    Nietzsche and “Hitler”
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 37 (S1): 1-17. 1999.
  •  365
    How one becomes what one is
    Philosophical Review 92 (3): 385-417. 1983.
  • Nehamas geeft in zijn essay een kritische reactie op de religieuze wereldvisie, en houdt een pleidooi voor het heidendom. Het heidendom zou in tegenstelling tot het monotheïsme erkennen dat er veel manieren zijn waarop mensen hun leven kunnen bevestigen, en is volgens Nehamas een combinatie tussen tolerantie en kosmopolitisme.