St Andrews, FIfe, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  •  3
    The ‘courage problem’ in Aristotle’s _Ethics_ is this: (1) courage is a virtue; (2) doctrinally, the exercise of virtue is supposed to be pleasant; and (3) typical exercises of courage are painful and dangerous. Aristotle makes moves to solve the difficulty. But what exactly is his solution, and does it work? In response to Raphael Woolf’s interpretation of Aristotle’s solution, according to which the courageous person merely _recognizes_ fearful things as fearful, but does not experience the fe…Read more
  •  5
    Practical Truth in Aristotle
    In Victor Caston (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Volume 57, Oxford University Press. pp. 249-272. 2020.
    In explaining the nature of _phronēsis_ in _Nicomachean Ethics_ 6, Aristotle invokes what he calls ‘practical truth’. The paper distinguishes and adjudicates between several interpretations of the puzzling phrase, including that of G. E. M. Anscombe. Its main tool of analysis is a distinction between semantic or assertoric truth, and truth in some richer-than-semantic sense. This distinction is illustrated from Aristotelian texts outside the _Nicomachean Ethics_. In conclusion, the paper reflect…Read more
  •  4
    Responding to the Platonists
    In Katerina Ierodiakonou, Paul Kalligas & Vassilis Karasmanis (eds.), Aristotle's Physics Alpha: Symposium Aristotelicum, Oxford University Press. pp. 302-340. 2019.
    This chapter examines Aristotle’s rejection of a Platonist theory positing two principles: Form and the Great and Small. He complains that, under the latter, privation is not distinguished from the subject of coming to be. This chapter discusses the background for this dyadic theory in the _Philebus_ and the _Timaeus._ It suggests that Aristotle’s opposition only makes sense if Platonists were proposing to extend it to cover comings to be such as biological reproduction. It also discusses whethe…Read more
  •  6
    The Knowledge Unacknowledged in the Theaetetus
    In Victor Caston (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Volume 51, Oxford University Press. pp. 87-118. 2016.
    Knowledge, says Hypothesis 3 of the _Theaetetus_, is true judgement with an account. Socrates explicates this _additively_: true judgement is the base, and something called ‘an account’ the addendum. The formula is additive not because it shows knowledge entailing true judgement while being something more. Additivity implies something stronger: that the true judgement that amounts to knowledge if combined with something else would have been available on its own in the absence of this something e…Read more
  •  22
    A Science of First Principles Metaphysics A 2
    In Oliver Primavesi (ed.), Aristotle's Metaphysics Alpha: Symposium Aristotelicum, Oxford University Press. pp. 43-67. 2012.
    This chapter continues the discussion of Cambiano's on A 1, since Aristotle's chapters A 1-2 are evidently a continuous introduction. The problem of what exactly it is an introduction to, i.e. the perennial question of the unity and diversity of Aristotle's metaphysical treatises, is considered here, although necessarily only in outline. It is also argued that, contrary to some scholarly opinions, this introduction should not be regarded as a protreptic to philosophy as such, i.e. as belonging t…Read more
  •  8
    This chapter takes up the question of whether modern interpreters are right to read the cosmology of Plato’s _Timaeus_—with its thesis that the _cosmos_ had a beginning—as “proto-historical” (i.e., as merely a _façon de parler_ that presents the _cosmos_ as though it had a beginning), and so as consistent with a sempiternalist reading of the _cosmos_. She argues against this, and thinks we should read Plato’s cosmogony literally—however unfashionable that might be.
  • Aporia 8
    In Michel Crubellier & André Laks (eds.), Aristotle's Metaphysics Beta Symposium Aristotelicum, Oxford University Press Uk. 2009.
  •  5
    Why no Platonistic Ideas of artefacts?
    In Dominic Scott (ed.), Maieusis: Essays in Ancient Philosophy in Honour of Myles Burnyeat, Oxford University Press. pp. 232-253. 2007.
    The discrepancy between evidence in the dialogues that Plato endorsed artefactual Ideas and evidence in Aristotle's _Metaphysics_ that he excluded them has been the focus of intense interest. Much of the discussion centres on Plato: what did he hold when, concerning artefact-Ideas? This chapter focuses on the question: why were _any_ early Platonists against artefact-Ideas? This question arises not simply because of examples in Plato's dialogues, but because the Platonists who rejected artefact-…Read more
  •  58
    La chance et les biens moraux et non moraux chez Aristote
    Les Etudes Philosophiques 138 (3): 49-63. 2021.
    Le sujet de l’étude est la relation entre le bonheur et la chance selon Aristote. Ce problème est abordé à partir de la question de savoir si la sagesse et la vertu suffisent au bonheur. Si tel était le cas, une personne pauvre et malade serait heureuse. Pour Aristote, au contraire, le bonheur nécessite des biens non moraux pour être complet. Le bonheur n’est pas seulement ce qui rend les autres choses bonnes, il est aussi ce qui est complet et désirable. Dans ce cas, la question du rapport du b…Read more
  •  6
    Virtue and beyond in Plato and Aristotle
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 43 (S1): 97-114. 2010.
  •  14
    Aristotle's Perceptual Realism
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 31 (S1): 137-159. 2010.
  •  13
    Necessity and Deliberation
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 17 (2): 289-306. 1987.
  • Interpreting Aristotle's Directions
    In Jyl Gentzler (ed.), Method in Ancient Philosophy, Clarendon Press. 2001.
  •  5
    Ethics with Aristotle
    OUP Usa. 1991.
    This book turns a philosophical lens on to the main themes of Aristotle's Ethics, offering detailed discussions of happiness as an end, virtue, character development, voluntary agency, prohairesis (rational choice), practical wisdom, incontinence, pleasure, and the theoretic ideal. It shows how Aristotle's essentially practical orientation in ethics affects the content as well as the method of his inquiry. Closely examined topics include the difference between practical thinking (about particula…Read more
  •  96
    Virtues and Parts of the Soul
    In Ethics with Aristotle, Oxford University Press. pp. 57-123. 1991.
    Discusses the virtue of character: the definition of it in terms of prohairesis and the orthos logos; in what sense it is a mean; how it involves conformity of desire to reason; how it develops in the soul; and how the conditions of upbringing explain why justice is a human virtue.
  •  63
    Practical Wisdom
    In Ethics with Aristotle, Oxford University Press. pp. 179-265. 1991.
    The main topics are Aristotle on the structure and psychology of rational choice ; on practice and production; on practical versus theoretical truth; on particulars as the sphere of practice; on ends and means in deliberation; and on the relation of character and intelligence in practical wisdom. The chapter argues against “Grand End” interpretations of this Aristotelian virtue.
  •  84
    The Voluntary
    In Ethics with Aristotle, Oxford University Press. 1991.
    In the context of perspectives drawn from philosophy of action and from Aristotle's natural philosophy, the chapter examines the ambiguity of the Aristotelian voluntary, its connections with censure and responsibility, its defensibility by excuse of force or ignorance, its bipolarity, its connection with character formation, and its implications, if any, for determinism.
  •  65
    Incontinence
    In Ethics with Aristotle, Oxford University Press. pp. 266-312. 1991.
    Discusses Aristotle's limitation of incontinence proper to the field of temperance, temptation by noble ends, the nature of incontinent ignorance, and what it is to use one's practical knowledge.
  •  74
    Pleasure
    In Ethics with Aristotle, Oxford University Press. 1991.
    No one understands better than Aristotle how deeply the desire for pleasure is rooted in human and animal nature. He must show that while pleasure can threaten morality, it also lies at the heart of human rational perfection. His complex reactions to neutralism, and to the hedonism of Eudoxus, shape his views about pleasure, activity, and completeness.
  •  29
    Happiness, the Supreme End
    In Ethics with Aristotle, Oxford University Press. pp. 3-56. 1991.
    What is the best human life? is a question for the Aristotelian statesman and for those whom upbringing has endowed with good starting points. The analysis of Aristotle's answer takes us to the idea of happiness, to the problem of its relation to other goods, and to its definition in terms of the human function.
  •  71
    Aristotle's Values
    In Ethics with Aristotle, Oxford University Press. pp. 366-438. 1991.
    The interpreter's problem is to reconcile Aristotle's reflections on theôria as the highest happiness with the practical emphasis of most of his ethics. Aristotle's problem is to explain why his godlike theoretical ideal ranks higher than his practical one, while showing that both are genuinely human ends. The argument turns on the importance of leisure and of serious activities.
  •  57
    Listening to Reason in Plato and Aristotle
    Mind 132 (527): 828-833. 2021.
    When we are in a rational frame of mind we are ready to listen to reason (tautology). But if we are not in a rational frame of mind, how does reason (in this ca.
  •  49
    Heavenly Bodies and First Causes
    In Georgios Anagnostopoulos (ed.), A Companion to Aristotle, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Notes Bibliography.
  •  254
    The Creation of the World
    with Anthony Kenny
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 78 (1): 65-92. 2004.
    Part 1 examines the roles of (a) intelligent cause, (b) empirical materials (fire, earth etc.), and (c) the resulting cosmos, in the account of world-making in the Timaeus. It is argued that the presence of (b) is essential for the distinctness of (a) and (c); and an explanation is proposed for why the biblical idea of creation faces no such problem. Part II shows how different suggestions implicit in Plato's doctrine of the intelligible model give rise to radically different kinds of Platonic m…Read more
  • Words, deeds, and lovers of truth in Aristotle
    In Jenny Bryan, Robert Wardy & James Warren (eds.), Authors and Authorities in Ancient Philosophy, Cambridge University Press. 2018.