•  38
    Value Judgments: How to Reason About Value Judgments
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 24 173-190. 1988.
    When opinion polls are conducted on some urgent matter of the day those polled are permitted to declare themselves ‘Don't Knows’. It is usually a minority who are so ill-disposed as to forget their civic duty to have an opinion on each and every subject, and they can usually expect to be rebuked as fence-sitters or slugabeds. People confronted by the demand that they take sides can generally produce a ‘view’ which they maintain against all-comers without the slightest attempt to seek out confirm…Read more
  •  89
    Citizens of the World and their Religion
    Philosophical Papers 48 (1): 103-122. 2019.
    The notion of a ‘cosmopolites’ has diverged quite far from its philosophical origins, but may eventually serve a similar function. The hope of a global peace or any sort of global managemen...
  •  49
    Plotinus: myth, metaphor and philosophical practice
    University of Chicago Press. 2016.
    A study of Plotinus's use of myth and metaphor, with special attention to the historical context and therapeutic use of his work.
  •  69
    Supernatural Explanations and Inspirations
    European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 9 (3): 49-63. 2017.
    I propose, in partial response to the rich essays by Millican & Thornhill-Miller and Salamon that religious traditions are too diverse to be represented either by a cosmological core or even an ethical. Religious sensibility is more often inspirational than explanatory, does not always require a transcendent origin of all things, and does not always support the sort of humanistic values preferred in the European Enlightenment. A widely shared global religion is more likely to be eclectic than ca…Read more
  •  82
    How Many Selves Make Me?
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 29 213-233. 1991.
    Cartesian accounts of the mental make it axiomatic that consciousness is transparent: what I feel, I know I feel, however many errors I may make about its cause. ‘I’ names a simple, unextended, irreducible substance, created ex nihilo or eternally existent, and only associated with the complete, extended, dissoluble substance or pretend-substance that is ‘my’ body by divine fiat. Good moderns take it for granted that ‘we’ now realize how shifting, foggy and deconstructible are the boundaries of …Read more
  •  73
    Who is God
    European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 8 (4): 3--22. 2016.
    The Hindu Brahmanas record that God’s reply to the question ”Who are you?’ was simply ”Who’: ”Who is the God whom we should honour with the oblation’: an indicative, as well as interrogative! Might this also be what Aeschylus intended by his reference to ”Zeus hostis pot’estin’ : not an expression of doubt, but of acknowledged mystery? The name by which He is to be called, perhaps, is not ”Zeus’ but, exactly, ”Whoever’. And most famously the God that Moses encountered, asked who He is, answered …Read more
  •  189
    Therapy and Theory Reconstructed: Plato and his Successors
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 66 83-102. 2010.
    When we speak of philosophy and therapy, or of philosophy as therapy, the usual intent is to suggest that ‘philosophizing’ is or should be a way to clarify the mind or purify the soul. While there may be little point in arguing with psychoses or deeply-embedded neuroses our more ordinary misjudgements, biases and obsessions may be alleviated, at least, by trying to ‘see things clearly and to see them whole’, by carefully identifying premises and seeing what they – rationally – support, and by se…Read more
  •  150
    Plotinus: Charms and Countercharms
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 65 215-231. 2009.
    For the last few years, thanks to the Leverhulme Trust, I've been largely absent from my department, working on the late antique philosopher Plotinus. To speak personally – it's been a difficult few years, since my youngest daughter has been afflicted with anorexia during this period, and my own bowel cancer was discovered, serendipitously, and removed, at the end of 2005. Since then I've had ample occasion to consider the importance – and the difficulty – of the practice of detachment, and also…Read more
  •  25
    No title available: Religious studies
    Religious Studies 20 (2): 308-310. 1984.
  •  15
    Nations and Empires1
    European Journal of Philosophy 4 (1): 63-80. 2008.
  •  114
    Non-Personal Minds
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 53 185-209. 2003.
    Persons are creatures with a range of personal capacities. Most known to us are also people, though nothing in observation or biological theory demands that all and only people are persons, nor even that persons, any more than people, constitute a natural kind. My aim is to consider what non-personal minds are like. Darwin's Earthworms are sensitive, passionate and, in their degree, intelligent. They may even construct maps, embedded in the world they perceive around them, so as to be able to co…Read more
  •  69
    Substance: or Chesterton's Abyss of Light
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 69 (1): 1-14. 1995.
  •  137
    XIV*—On Wishing there were Unicorns
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 90 (1): 247-266. 1990.
    Stephen R. L. Clark; XIV*—On Wishing there were Unicorns, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 90, Issue 1, 1 June 1990, Pages 247–266, https://doi.o.
  •  79
    XV*—God, Good and Evil
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 77 (1): 247-264. 1977.
    Stephen R. L. Clark; XV*—God, Good and Evil, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 77, Issue 1, 1 June 1977, Pages 247–264, https://doi.org/10.1093/ar.
  • In God's World and the Great Awakening, Professor Clark's main concern is with the way we can `turn aside' to the Truth from the normal delusions of self-concern. He restates a traditional, Neoplatonic metaphysics as the proper context for scientific and religious practice, and defends a serious Platonic realism against both scientism and anti-realism. Neither scientism, which identifies Truth with what can be revealed to the objectifying gaze, nor fashionable anti-realism, which equates Truth s…Read more
  •  148
    Aesthetic themes in pagan and Christian Neoplatonism from Plotinus to Gregory of Nyssa
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 24 (4): 784-786. 2016.
  •  3
    Book reviews (review)
    Mind 88 (1): 125-127. 1979.
  •  12
    Book reviews (review)
    Mind 90 (358): 302-303. 1981.
  •  1
    Book reviews (review)
    Mind 91 (363): 459-461. 1982.
  •  55
    Platonists and Participation
    Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 71 (2-3): 249-266. 2015.
    Resumo O autor começará por examinar a noção de participação, tal como é aplicada por Platão, primeiro à distinção gramatical entre identidade e predicação e depois às questões metafísicas acerca de sujeitos reais, sendo eles indivíduos contáveis, de um “material” subjacente, ou Formas que aparecem mais ou menos reconhecíveis na nossa experiência. Mesmo os materialistas modernos admitem uma distinção entre a realidade tal como ela “é” e tal como “aparece”. Surge então a questão, mais ainda para …Read more
  •  79
    Philosophy as a Way of Life: Ancients and Moderns - Essays in Honor of Pierre Hadot (edited book)
    with Michael Chase and Michael McGhee
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2013.
    This unique collection of essays on the late Pierre Hadot’s revolutionary approach to studying and practising philosophy traces the links between his work and that of thinkers from Wittgenstein to the French postmodernists. It shows how his secular spiritual exercises expand our horizons, enabling us to be in a fuller, more authentic way. Comprehensive treatment of a neglected theme: philosophy’s practical relevance in our lives Interdisciplinary analysis reflects the wide influence of Hadot’s t…Read more
  •  103
    Aristotle is routinely blamed for several errors that, it is supposed, held 'science' back for centuries - among others, a belief in distinct, homogenous and unchanging species of living creatures, an essentialist account of human nature, and a suggestion that 'slavery' was a natural institution. This paper briefly examines Aristotle's own arguments and opinions, and the perils posed by a contrary belief in changeable species. Contrary to received opinion even amongst some of his followers, Aris…Read more
  •  71
    Atheism Considered as a Christian Sect
    Philosophy 90 (2): 277-303. 2015.
    Atheists in general need share no particular political or metaphysical views, but atheists of the most modern, Western, militant sort, escaping from a merely nihilistic mind-set, are usually humanists of an especially triumphalist kind. In this paper I offer a critical analysis and partial history of their claims, suggesting that they are members of a distinctivelyChristianheretical sect, formed in reaction to equally heretical forms of monotheistic idolatry.