•  123
    On being rational
    Ratio 22 (3): 350-358. 2009.
    To be rational is to be engaged in collaborative, corrigible, historically informed inquiry and deliberation. Critical intelligence is merely the beginning of rationality. Substantive rationality also requires reflective and imaginative inquiry. Its active exercise presupposes trust and mandates a commitment to the common good, to responsible attempts to create the political institutions and social conditions on which intellectual and political trust can flourish. Without these, formal and calcu…Read more
  • As Diotima Saw Socrates
    Arion. forthcoming.
  •  15
    Les multiples visages de la moralité
    with Mikaël Garandeau
    Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 99 (2). 1994.
  •  326
    The dramatic sources of philosophy
    Philosophy and Literature 32 (1). 2008.
    This paper traces some of the sources of Socratic dialectic: myth, drama, lyric poetry, law and the courts, pre-Socratic cosmology.
  •  65
  •  53
    The Psychology of Aristotelian Tragedy
    Midwest Studies in Philosophy 16 (1): 53-72. 1991.
  •  65
    Witnessing philosophers
    Philosophy and Literature 22 (2): 309-327. 1998.
    Philosophic writing appears in a variety of genres, addressed to a variety of audiences; it appears nestled within distinctive 'enterprises' : Plato, Berkeley and Hume wrote dialogues; Augustine and Rousseau wrote autobiographical confessions; Mill and Bernard Williams wrote reports to Parliament; Boethius and Descartes wrote meditations; Bacon, Montaign and Hume wrote essays; Aquinas and our contemporaries contribte articles;Leibniz and Hume wrote histories' they all wrote letters and discourse…Read more
  •  169
    Explaining emotions
    Journal of Philosophy 75 (March): 139-161. 1978.
    The challenge of explaining the emotions has engaged the attention of the best minds in philosophy and science throughout history. Part of the fascination has been that the emotions resist classification. As adequate account therefore requires receptivity to knowledge from a variety of sources. The philosopher must inform himself of the relevant empirical investigation to arrive at a definition, and the scientist cannot afford to be naive about the assumptions built into his conceptual apparatus…Read more
  •  129
    Questioning moral theories
    Philosophy 85 (1): 29-46. 2010.
    Not a day passes but we find ourselves indignant about something or other. When is our indignation justified, and when does it count as moral indignation rather than a legitimate but non-moral gripe? You might think that we should turn to moral theories – to the varieties of utilitarian, Kantian, virtue theories, etc – to answer this question. I shall try to convince you that this is a mistake, that moral theory – as it is ordinarily presently conceived and studied – does not have a specific sub…Read more
  •  70
    The Two Faces of Spinoza
    Review of Metaphysics 41 (2). 1987.
    "NOTHING," SAYS SPINOZA "can be destroyed except by an external cause." And he adds, "An idea that excludes the existence of our body cannot be in our mind.... The mind endeavors to think of those things that increase or assist the body's power of activity... and to think only of those things that affirm its power of activity". These upbeat passages are mystifying, and sometimes downright disturbing to us dark, obsessive minds, who are prone to think of things that diminish our powers, prone to …Read more
  •  77
    Plato's counsel on education
    Philosophy 73 (2): 157-178. 1998.
    Plato's dialogues can be read as a carefully staged exhibition and investigation of paideia, education in the broadest sense, including all that affects the formation of character and mind. The twentieth century textbook Plato — the Plato of the Myth of the Cave and the Divided Line, the ascent to the Good through Forms and Ideas — is but one of his elusive multiple authorial personae, each taking a different perspective on his investigations. As its focused problems differ, each Platonic dialog…Read more
  •  110
    The place of pleasure in Aristotle's ethics
    Mind 83 (332): 481-497. 1974.
    BACKGROUND: Although placing patients with acute respiratory failure in a prone (face down) position improves their oxygenation 60 to 70 percent of the time, the effect on survival is not known. METHODS: In a multicenter, randomized trial, we compared conventional treatment (in the supine position) of patients with acute lung injury or the acute respiratory distress syndrome with a predefined strategy of placing patients in a prone position for six or more hours daily for 10 days. We enrolled 30…Read more
  •  5
    A Plea for Ambivalence
    In Peter Goldie (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Emotion, Oxford University Press. 2009.
  •  51
    Moral Prejudices: Essays on Ethics
    Philosophical Review 104 (4): 608. 1995.
    Annette Baier sets the title, the genre, and the task of her book from Hume’s essay "Of Moral Prejudices." Rather than arguing from or towards general principles, these essays call upon a wide range of reading, observation, and experience: we are not only meant to be enlightened, but also invited to adopt the reflective habits of mind they exemplify. Like Hume, Baier analyzes and evaluates our attitudes and customs; like him, she finds that our foibles and our strengths are closely linked; and l…Read more
  • 1980
    In Amélie Rorty (ed.), Essays on Aristotle’s Ethics, University of California Press. 1980.
  •  46
    Formal Traces in Cartesian Functional Explanation
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 14 (4). 1984.
    In the Passion of the Soul Descartes sets out to explain the origins and structure of intentional voluntary action, to give an account of physical behavior and motion that has psychological and intellectual causes.Actually of course this is not at all what he says. He announces an analysis of the passions of the soul. But why does he define his subject as he does? His correspondence had forced a concern with questions of virtue. How is he to introduce an account of virtue in his metaphysically, …Read more
  • The Cockrel Weathervane Swerves
    Arion. forthcoming.
  •  30
    Comments on Stallknecht's Theses
    with Charles Hartshorne, Ernest Hocking, V. C. Chappell, Robert Whittemore, Glenn A. Olds, Samuel M. Thompson, W. Norris Clarke, Eliseo Vivas, and E. S. Salmon
    Review of Metaphysics 9 (3). 1956.
    2. The equal status mentioned in Thesis 2 need not mean, "equally concrete" or "inclusive," but only, "equally real," where "real" means having a character of its own with reference to which opinions can be true or false. But becoming or process is alone fully concrete or inclusive, since if A is without becoming, and B becomes, then the togetherness of AB also becomes. A new constituent means a new totality. In this sense, becoming is the ultimate principle.
  •  35
    Rorty (edited book)
    Univ of California Press. 1986.
    The essays in this volume form a commentary on Descartes' _Meditations_. Following the sequence of the meditational stages, the authors analyze the function of each stage in transforming the reader, to realize his essential nature as a rational inquirer, capable of scientific, demonstrable knowledge of the world. There are essays on the genre of meditational writing, on the implications of the opening cathartic section of the book on Descartes' theory of perception and his use of skeptical argum…Read more
  • Relativism, persons, and practices
    In M. Krausz (ed.), Relativism: Interpretation and Confrontation, Notre Dame University Press. 1989.
  •  125
    Fearing Death
    Philosophy 58 (224). 1983.
    Many have said, and I think some have shown, that it is irrational to fear death. The extinction of what is essential to the self—whether it be biological death or the permanent cessation of consciousness—cannot by definition be experienced by oneself as a loss or as a harm
  •  120
    Vi. akrasia and conflict
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 23 (2). 1980.
    As Elster suggests in his chapter 'Contradictions of the Mind', in Logic and Society, akrasia and self-deception represent the most common psychological functions for a person in conflict and contradiction. This article develops the theme of akrasia and conflict. Section I says what akrasia is not. Section II describes the character of the akrates, analyzing the sorts of conflicts to which he is subject and describing the sources of his debilities. A brief account is then given of the attraction…Read more
  •  79
    The Lures of Akrasia
    Philosophy 92 (2): 167-181. 2017.
    There is more akrasia than meets the eye: it can occur in speech and perception, cognitively and emotionally as well as between decision and action. The lures of akrasia are the same as those that are exercised in ordinary psychological and cognitive inferential contexts. But because it is over-determined and because it occurs in opaque intentional contexts, its attribution remains highly fallible.
  •  9
    The Political Sources of Emotions: Greed and Anger
    Philosophical Studies 89 (2-3): 143-159. 1998.