•  37
    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.
  • Book reviews (review)
    Mind 88 (1): 125-127. 1979.
  • Book reviews (review)
    Mind 90 (358): 302-303. 1981.
  • Book reviews (review)
    Mind 91 (363): 459-461. 1982.
  •  16
    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
  •  40
    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.
  •  56
    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
  •  38
    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 distinctively Christian heretical sect, formed in reaction to equally heretical forms of monotheistic idolatry.
  •  7
    "In this engaging study Professor Clark sets out to show that there are good philosophical reasons for theism, and Christian theism in particular. He travels the breadth of our intellectual engagement with the world, from ethics to scientific knowledge, and his journey is vigorously argued, fresh, lively and readable. He explores the assumptions which underpin our philosophical and everyday thinking alike, examines the construction of the arguments used to support them, and tests the sturdiness …Read more
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  •  26
    Descartes' Debt to Augustine
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 32 73-88. 1992.
    Jonathan Edwards identified the central act of faith as ‘the cordial consent of beings to Being in general’, which is to say to God. That equation, of Being, Truth and God, is rarely taken seriously in analytical circles. My argument will be that this is to neglect the real context of a great deal of past philosophy, particularly the very Cartesian arguments from which so many undergraduate courses begin. All too many students issue from such courses immunized against enthusiasm, in the conceit …Read more
  •  34
    The Limits of Explanation: Limited Explanations
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 27 195-210. 1990.
    When I was first approached to read a paper at the conference from which this volume takes its beginning I expected that Flint Schier, with whom I had taught a course on the Philosophy of Biology in my years at Glasgow, would be with us to comment and to criticize. I cannot let this occasion pass without expressing once again my own sense of loss. I am sure that we would all have gained by his presence, and hope that he would find things both to approve, and disapprove, in the following venture.
  •  24
    The Better Part
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 35 29-49. 1993.
    According to Aristotle, the goal of anyone who is not simply stupid or slavish is to live a worthwhile life. There are, no doubt, people who have no goal at all beyond the moment's pleasure or release from pain. There may be people incapable of reaching any reasoned decision about what to do, and acting on it. But anyone who asks how she should live implicitly agrees that her goal is to live well, to live a life that she can think worth living. That goal, eudaimonia, is something that is sought …Read more
  •  19
    Tools, Machines and Marvels
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 38 159-176. 1995.
    Technology, according to Derry and Williams's Short History, ‘comprises all that bewilderingly varied body of knowledge and devices by which man progressively masters his natural environment’. Their casual, and unconscious, sexism is not unrelated to my present topic. Women enter the story as spinners, burden bearers and, at long last, typists. ‘The tying of a bundle on the back or the dragging of it along upon the outspread twigs of a convenient branch are contributions [and by implication the …Read more
  •  33
    Abstract Morality, Concrete Cases
    Royal Institute of Philosophy Lecture Series 22 35-53. 1987.
    Practitioners of disciplines whose problems are debated by moral philosophers regularly complain that the philosophers are engaged in abstract speculation, divorced from ‘real-life’ consequences and responsibilities, that it is the practitioners (doctor, research scientist, politician) who must take the decisions, and that they cannot (and should not) act in accordance with strict abstract logic.
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  •  4
    No title available: Religious studies
    Religious Studies 27 (4): 559-561. 1991.
  •  52
    Where have all the Angels Gone?1: STEPHEN R. L. CLARK
    Religious Studies 28 (2): 221-234. 1992.
    Anyone who wishes to talk about angels has to respond to the mocking question, how many of them can dance on the point of a pin. The answer is: ‘just as many as they please’. Angels being immaterial intellects do not occupy space to the exclusion of any other such intellectual substance, and their being ‘on’ the point of a pin can only mean that they attend to it. The question, however, is not one that concerned our mediaeval predecessors, although it seems as difficult to persuade anyone of thi…Read more
  •  26
    World Religions and World Orders: STEPHEN R. L. CLARK
    Religious Studies 26 (1): 43-57. 1990.
    There are good reasons for being suspicious of the very concept of ‘a religion’, let alone a ‘world religion’. It may be useful for a hospital administrator to know a patient's ‘religion’ – as Protestant or Church of England or Catholic or Buddhist – but such labels clearly do little more than identify the most suitable chaplain, and connote groupings in the vast and confusing region of ‘religious thought and practice’ that are of very different ranks. By any rational, genealogical taxonomy ‘Pro…Read more
  • KENNY, A. "Aristotle's Theory of the Will" (review)
    Mind 90 (n/a): 302. 1981.
  •  9
    No Title available: New Books (review)
    Philosophy 60 (233): 411-413. 1985.
  •  38
    Orwell and the Anti-Realists
    Philosophy 67 (260): 141-154. 1992.
    The purpose of Newspeak was not only to provide a medium of expression for the world-view and mental habits proper to the devotees of Ingsoc, but to make all other modes of thought impossible.
  •  9
    Reviews: Reviews (review)
    Philosophy 84 (1): 156-158. 2009.
  •  40
    Sexual Ontology and Group Marriage
    Philosophy 58 (224): 215-227. 1983.
    Philosophers of earlier ages have usually spent time in considering thenature of marital, and in general familial, duty. Paley devotes an entire book to those ‘relative duties which result from the constitution of the sexes’,1 a book notable on the one hand for its humanity and on the other for Paley‘s strange refusal to acknowledge that the evils for which he condemns any breach of pure monogamy are in large part the result of the fact that such breaches are generally condemned. In a society wh…Read more