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82The Myth of Protagoras and Plato's Theory of MeasurementHistory of Philosophy Quarterly 4 (4): 371-384. 1987.
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33The Bounds of Freedom: About the Eastern and Western Approaches to FreedomPeter Lang Incorporated, International Academic Publishers. 1995.The Straniak Philosophy Prize 1995 awarded by the Hermann and Marianne Straniak Foundation Sarnen/Switzerland This book explores Eastern and Western ideas of freedom and reveals the essential differences, as well as similarities, between Eastern and Western cultural values. Inspired by an ancient Greek myth recounted by Protagoras, the authors suggest that three important values tend to motivate human activity: achieving pleasure, achieving results, and obeying moral law. Then, drawing on intell…Read more
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44Plato and Protagoras: Truth and Relativism in Ancient Greek PhilosophyLexington Books. 1999.Are human beings antithetical in nature? Is there a radical difference between pleasure, efficiency, and moral good, or is the conflict only imaginary? These have traditionally been considered the central questions of Plato's most vivid dialogue, the Protagoras. Many interpreters have seen this dialogue as a confrontation between the moralist and the relativist. This dichotomy is manifest when Plato and Protagoras discuss theoretical questions concerning either knowledge of facts or knowledge of…Read more
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55The sources of Wittgenstein’s negation of the knowing subjectSemiotica 113 (1-2): 159-170. 1997.
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276The moral intellectualism of Plato’s SocratesBochumer Philosophisches Jahrbuch Fur Antike Und Mittelalter 13 (1): 1-14. 2008.Commentators do not take Socrates’ theses in the Hippias Minor seriously. They believe it is an aporetic dialogue and even that Socrates does not mean what he says. Hence they are unable to understand the presuppositions behind Socrates’ two interconnected theses: that those who do wrong and lie voluntarily are better than those who do wrong unintentionally, and that no one does wrong and lies voluntarily. Arguing that liars are better than the unenlightened, Socrates concludes that there are no…Read more
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77Toward a Rationality of Emotions (review)International Studies in Philosophy 29 (2): 145-146. 1997.
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60On Justice and Legitimation. A Critique of Jürgen Habermas' Concept of "Historical Reconstructivism"Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 44 (2): 273-277. 1990.
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65Book Reviews (review)The European Legacy 3 (5): 117-161. 1998.Mind and World. By John McDowell. 191 pp. n.p.g. Art and the French Commune: Imagining Paris after War and Revolution. By Albert Boime The Princeton Series in Nineteenth‐Century Art, Culture and Society xv + 234 pp. $19.95, £14.95 paper. Individual Choice and the Structures of History: Alexis de Tocqueville as Historian Reappraised. By Harvey Mitchell 290 pp. $54.95, £35.00 cloth. Zakhor: Jewish History and Jewish Memory. By Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi, 2d ed.. 190pp., $12.95 paper. The European Comm…Read more
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1072The Ontological Argument ReconsideredJournal of Philosophical Research 15 279-310. 1990.The ontological argument- proposed by St. Anselm and developed by Descartes, Leibniz, Kant, Hegel, and Marx- furnishes a key to understanding the relationship between thought and reality. In this article, we shall focus on Hegel’s attitude towards the ontological argument as set out in his Science of Logic, where it appears as a paradigm of the relationship between thought and reality. It should be remarked, moreover, that our choice of the subject was not random and that it was selected for the…Read more
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1The Human Origins of Fortuna in Machiavelli's ThoughtHistory of Political Thought 11 (1): 21. 1990.
Haifa, Israel
Areas of Specialization
| Epistemology |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |