•  141
    Relation and object in Plato's approach to knowledge
    Theoria 53 (2-3): 141-159. 1987.
    THE aim of this paper is to explain a paradox in Plato's philosophy. On the one hand, Plato reduces virtue to knowledge; on the other, he rejects the possibility of knowledge or at least has serious doubts that it exists. I shall propose in this paper that the definition of virtue as knowledge is a logical outcome of Plato's denial of the particular aspect of knowledge as cognitive relation. This paper may also be considered as an attempt to resolve the Hintikka‐Santas polemic about whether ther…Read more
  •  2
  • The misunderstandings of hume's paradox of causation
    Giornale di Metafisica 23 (3): 377-398. 2001.
  •  155
    Praxis and poesis in Aristotle's practical philosophy
    Journal of Value Inquiry 24 (3): 185-198. 1990.
    All the paradoxes in the Engberg-Pedersen interpretation and all the present-day discussions about whether energeia is an activity or a state, are not, in my opinion, the result of a defective reading of Aristotle but, rather, the influence of the prevailing values of our industrial society. These values - held, as it seems, by these commentators - are conspicuously teleological: they prevent us from grasping the qualitative difference between praxis and poesis and between energeia and kinesis. …Read more
  •  103
    Circularity of Thought in Hegel's Logic
    Review of Metaphysics 44 (1): 95-109. 1990.
    HEGEL says that "when enquiry is made as to the kind of predicate belonging to [a] subject, the act of judgement necessarily implies an underlying concept [Begriff]; but this concept is expressed only by the predicate." According to this, some concept of the subject must precede predication. This circularity can be formulated as follows: If the statement is the "factory" in which concepts are produced, how is it that the concepts precede the statement and are not merely produced within it in the…Read more
  •  220
    Time, Understanding, and Will
    with Daniel Arapu and Jean Burrell
    Diogenes 48 (190): 3-21. 2000.
    In the passage from the Enneads devoted to discussing and defining the nature of time, it is written that first one must experience eternity, which, as everyone knows, is the model and archetype of time. This initial warning, which is especially serious because we trust in its sincerity, appears to wipe out all hope of finding common ground with its author.Jorge Luis Borges, History of EternitySo let us leave the Platonists to wander off down a blind alley. Poor simpletons, they think they will …Read more
  •  62
    The mind and its depths
    History of European Ideas 22 (1): 61-62. 1996.