Leeds, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
  •  53
    II_– _Dominic Scott_: Primary and Secondary _Eudaimonia
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 73 (1): 225-242. 1999.
  •  62
    The subject of this paper is poetic creativity as it features in various Platonic works: the nature and source of creativity, as well as the way in which it differs from the activity of philosophy. I shall argue that Plato gives us at least three quite different models of poetic creativity. One can be extracted from the Ion and the Meno, another from the Symposiim and a third from the Gorgias and Republic VI. The main focus of this paper will be on the model given in the Symposium where Diotima …Read more
  •  14
    Dominic Scott compares the Republic and Nicomachean Ethics from a methodological perspective. He argues that Plato and Aristotle distinguish similar levels of argument in the defence of justice, and that they both follow the same approach: Plato because he thinks it will suffice, Aristotle because he thinks there is no need to go beyond it.
  •  159
    Questions about learning and discovery have fascinated philosophers from Plato onwards. Does the mind bring innate resources of its own to the process of learning or does it rely wholly upon experience? Plato was the first philosopher to give an innatist response to this question and in doing so was to provoke the other major philosophers of ancient Greece to give their own rival explanations of learning. This book examines these theories of learning in relation to each other. It presents an ent…Read more
  •  172
    Maieusis: essays in ancient philosophy in honour of Myles Burnyeat (edited book)
    with Myles Burnyeat
    Oxford University Press. 2007.
    Maieusis pays tribute to the highly influential work of Myles Burnyeat, whose contributions to the study of ancient philosophy have done much to enhance the ...
  •  162
    Aristotle on well-being and intellectual contemplation: Dominic Scott
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 73 (1). 1999.
    [David Charles] Aristotle, it appears, sometimes identifies well-being with one activity, sometimes with several, including ethical virtue. I argue that this appearance is misleading. In the Nicomachean Ethics, intellectual contemplation is the central case of human well-being, but is not identical with it. Ethically virtuous activity is included in human well-being because it is an analogue of intellectual contemplation. This structure allows Aristotle to hold that while ethically virtuous acti…Read more