•  36
    Irrationality of the Irrationality Argument against Suicide
    The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 4 (3): 489-493. 2004.
  •  23
    Individuals discovered to have engaged in serial plagiarism in philosophy are few, but the academic publishers falling victim to them are many. Some of the most respected publishing houses in philosophy have recently dealt with the problem of having published plagiarized material. The various responses by these publishers to an instance of serial plagiarism, one that involves forty-three articles and book chapters, provides a real-time snapshot of the practices for correcting the scholarly recor…Read more
  •  58
    Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Concordia, and the Canon Law Tradition
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 88 181-196. 2014.
    Giovanni Pico della Mirandola is best known for his Oratio, one of many works containing his promise to prove that the philosophies of Plato and Aristotle are in agreement. Pico never fulfilled this promise, however, and commentators have at times derided Pico’s concordist project. The present paper argues that Pico’s notion of concordia was at least partly inspired by a jurisprudential habit derived from his early training in canon law. After examining Pico’s explicit but dispersed statements o…Read more
  •  103
    Aristotle's Four Truth Values
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 12 (4): 585-609. 2004.
    No abstract
  •  14
    The history of moral dilemma theory often ignores the medieval period, overlooking the sophisticated theorizing by several thinkers who debated the existence of moral dilemmas from 1150 to 1450. In this book Michael V. Dougherty offers a rich and fascinating overview of the debates which were pursued by medieval philosophers, theologians and canon lawyers, illustrating his discussion with a diverse range of examples of the moral dilemmas which they considered. He shows that much of what seems pa…Read more
  •  37
    Ghazālī and Metaphorical Predication in the Third Discussion of the Tahāfut al-Falāsifa
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 82 (3): 391-409. 2008.
    Ghazālī’s The Incoherence of the Philosophers is an unusual philosophical work for a number of reasons, not the least of which is the author’s explicit disavowalof any of the conclusions contained within it. The present essay examines some of the hermeneutical challenges that face readers of the work and offers anexegetical account of the much-neglected Third Discussion, which examines a key point of Neoplatonic metaphysics. The paper argues that Ghazālī’s maintaining of the incompatibility of m…Read more
  •  21
    Aquinas's Disputed Questions on Evil: A Critical Guide (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2015.
    Thomas Aquinas's Disputed Questions on Evil is a careful and detailed analysis of the general topic of evil, including discussions on evil as privation, human free choice, the cause of moral evil, moral failure, and the so-called seven deadly sins. This collection of ten, specially commissioned new essays, the first book-length English-language study of Disputed Questions on Evil, examines the most interesting and philosophically relevant aspects of Aquinas's work, highlighting what is distincti…Read more