•  47
    This chapter contains sections titled: Homer The Subjectivity Objection Socrates Further Reading.
  •  1839
    Philosophizing with Plato and Aristotle
    Independently published. 2023.
    This book teaches why and how to philosophize in the manner of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. It offers philosophy to readers as one of the great devotions of life, wonderful for the ideals it sets in the sky and the security it gives. It helps readers uncover their deepest beliefs about life and reality.
  •  92
    Genos and Eidos in Plato
    Ancient Philosophy 43 (1): 35-50. 2023.
    English translates ‘genos’ as kind and ‘eidos’ as form, which differ in meaning as much as ‘herd’ and ‘brand’ do. But there are hard passages where ‘genos’ and ‘eidos’ have appeared to be synonyms, usually given the new meaning class. We show that, although ‘genos’ and ‘eidos’ are never synonyms and continue to mean kind and form, the word ‘eidos’ can be used figuratively, as a metonym, for a genos.
  •  51
    Les trois vies philosophiques de Socrate
    Philosophie Antique 20 (20): 49-74. 2020.
    As Plato presents him, Socrates became notorious after he “changed direction so as to investigate the god”—that is, to test the oracular pronouncement that no one was wiser. This raises questions : what was his direction before he tested the oracle? And what did Socrates do that gave Chaerephon a reason to ask the oracle whether anyone was wiser? Evidently, Chaerephon must have known something extraordinary about Socrates before the oracle spoke. But Socrates’ testimony in the Apology is that hi…Read more
  •  107
    At Philebus 23c4-26d10 Socrates makes a division into three kinds: Unbounded (apeiron), Bound (peras), and Mix (meikton). I review problems for the main interpretations of Unbounded and Mix and review kinds of scales defined in abstract measurement theory. Then I take 23c4-26d10 speech by speech, interpreting the Unbounded as a kind containing partial scales, Bound as the kind containing the relations and quantities needed to turn partial scales into appropriate ratio scales, and Mix as the kind…Read more
  •  56
    Socrates
    The Philosophers' Magazine 92 79-84. 2021.
    Socrates argued that the unexamined life is not worth living. What this means is we are so ignorant that we are guilty of criminal negligence how to lead our lives, unless we do our due diligence by philosophising.
  •  89
    Plato’s Philebus
    Ancient Philosophy 40 (2): 495-511. 2020.
  •  7
    Argument Analysis of Plato’s Laches
    with Christopher M. Turner
    Archelogos. 2014.
    Argument analysis of Plato's Laches.
  •  1050
    This book is an anthology with the following themes. Non-European Tradition: Bussanich interprets main themes of Hindu ethics, including its roots in ritual sacrifice, its relationship to religious duty, society, individual human well-being, and psychic liberation. To best assess the truth of Hindu ethics, he argues for dialogue with premodern Western thought. Pfister takes up the question of human nature as a case study in Chinese ethics. Is our nature inherently good (as Mengzi argued) or ba…Read more
  •  914
    Plato's Philebus: Greek Text with Basic Grammar, 2nd Edition (2nd ed.)
    with Hayden Niehus and Brianna Zgurich
    Kindle Direct Publishing. 2023.
    This commentary makes Plato’s Philebus accessible to second-year Greek readers and for scholars who read Greek only infrequently. We aim to help readers who wish to study the text more closely than translations permit. We hope readers new to Plato will be at ease with him by the time they complete the dialogue, but each page is self-contained: readers interested in only one passage need not worry that they have missed earlier remarks. Each page of the commentary contains about eight numbered lin…Read more
  •  628
    Review of Platon: Werke, Ubersetzung und Kommentar, vol. 4: Lysis, by Michael Bordt (review)
    Ancient Philosophy 22 (1): 177-180. 2002.
    Praising much, I criticize this commentary on Plato's Lysis on three points: I. The book's dismissal of Socratic intellectualism. II. The book's finding of a Socratic doctrine of symmetrical friendship between good people. III. The book's reading of the final aporia.
  •  87
    Philebus 11b: Good or the Good
    Apeiron 53 (2): 161-185. 2020.
    The sentence setting the stage for the philosophical investigation within the Philebus is, naively translated, “He says that to enjoy is good.” Instead of the predicate adjective “good,” most interpreters prefer to translate with a definite description, “the good,” with consequences that affect the interpretation of the dialogue as a whole. Part one defends the naïve translation, both in the context of Socrates’ first seven speeches and viewing the dialogue as a whole. Part two considers and rej…Read more
  •  129
    Dividing Plato’s Kinds
    Phronesis 63 (4): 392-407. 2018.
    A dilemma has stymied interpretations of the Stranger’s method of dividing kinds into subkinds in Plato’sSophistandStatesman. The dilemma assumes that the kinds are either extensions or intensions. Now kinds divide like extensions, not intensions. But extensions cannot explain the distinct identities of kinds that possess the very same members. We propose understanding a kind as like an animal body—the Stranger’s simile for division—possessing both an extension and an intension. We find textual …Read more
  •  81
    I interpret and defend Socrates’ account of sensate pleasure and pain. Lovers of sensations will find Socrates’ restriction of pleasure's value to modal activity incredible. Nevertheless, I argue that the value sensations have, lies not in their being sensations but in their being activities. On my interpretation, the measuring skill of the value of pleasure is idealized Socratic cross‐examination or dialectic.
  •  54
    The Righteous Are Happy
    In Socrates, pleasure, and value, Oxford University Press. 1999.
    At the end of Republic Book 1, Socrates leads Thrasymachus to the conclusion that unrighteousness is never more profitable than righteousness, by showing that the righteous are happy and the unrighteous miserable. This argument, although the cornerstone of Socratic ethics, has seemed laughable to many interpreters. I defend the argument.
  •  65
    Death Is One of Two Things
    In Socrates, pleasure, and value, Oxford University Press. 1999.
    Socrates argues at Apology 40c–41d that death is either migration of the soul or nothingness, and is in either case something good. I defend the argument from the stock objections, and find in it an account of pleasure as modal rather than sensate.
  •  72
    Plato's Aporetic Style
    In Socrates, pleasure, and value, Oxford University Press. 1999.
    There has been persistent controversy about the aporetic dialogs. Are they meant to convey any underlying philosophical position? A strong argument in favor of a negative answer rests on the following premise: if Plato had been trying to present a positive doctrine in his aporetic dialogs, he would have chosen a more straightforward style of writing for his purpose. I argue that this premise is false.
  •  79
    Introduction
    In Socrates, pleasure, and value, Oxford University Press. 1999.
    This chapter presents the problem that the book solves. The problem is that Socrates in different places argues for three seemingly incompatible theses about the human good: it is pleasure; it is not pleasure; it is virtue. The solution is to harmonize these theses by distinguishing Socrates’ theory of pleasure from competing theories and by identifying virtuous activity with pleasant activity for a human being.
  •  88
    Although Socrates gives a compelling argument in Republic book 1 that virtue is sufficient for happiness, in other passages he seems to hold that it is insufficient. Brickhouse and Smith resolve the apparent inconsistency by attributing an insufficiency thesis to Socrates. I argue, against their interpretation, that Socrates can consistently hold the sufficiency thesis.
  •  68
    Callicles' Hedonism
    In Socrates, pleasure, and value, Oxford University Press. 1999.
    There has been no consensus as to what version of hedonist Callicles is. Suggested versions are that he is a prudential, indiscriminate, or sybaritic hedonist. I argue, against these interpretations, that Callicles holds a satisfaction hedonism of felt desire with respect to the intrinsically desirable.
  •  74
    Ethical Protagoreanism
    In Socrates, pleasure, and value, Oxford University Press. 1999.
    The Gorgias seems to attack hedonism; the Protagoras seems to defend it. The resolution to this apparent inconsistency is to deny that the Gorgias attacks hedonism, in general. I argue that the target attacked in the Gorgias is hedonism of apparent pleasure: an ethical Protagoreanism.
  •  74
    The Socrates of early Platonic dialogs defends both the following claims about human good: Pleasure is the good ; Virtue is the good. I reconcile these claims by showing how Socrates can identify virtuous activity with pleasant activity for a human being. The key is to interpret pleasure as modal, not sensate.
  •  85
    Callicles Refuted
    In Socrates, pleasure, and value, Oxford University Press. 1999.
    It is of the highest importance to Plato to refute Callicles’ hedonist thesis, and for the purposes of such a refutation, he gives two arguments, which I call the argument from opposites and the argument from pleased cowards. I give a new interpretation of these arguments and show that both arguments are defensible.
  •  132
    Plato, Philebus 15B: a problem solved
    Classical Quarterly 54 (2): 394-405. 2004.
  •  1828
    The Unity of Virtue, Ambiguity, and Socrates’ Higher Purpose
    Ancient Philosophy 37 (2): 333-346. 2017.
    In the Protagoras, Socrates argues that all the virtues are the very same knowledge of human wellbeing so that virtue is all one. But elsewhere Socrates appears to endorse that the virtues-such as courage, temperance, and reverence-are different parts of a single whole. Ambiguity interpretations harmonize the conflicting texts by taking the virtue words to be equivocal, such as between theoretical and applied expertise, or between a power and its deeds. I argue that such interpretations have fai…Read more
  •  1389
    True Love Is Requited
    Ancient Philosophy 24 (1): 67-80. 2004.
    I defend the argument in Plato's Lysis that true love is requited. I state the argument, the main objections, and my replies. I begin with a synopsis of the dialogue.
  •  630
    Plato's "Theaetetus" and "Sophist": What False Sentences Are Not
    Dissertation, The University of Wisconsin - Madison. 1982.
    Plato's Theaetetus rejects four explanations of how someone could falsely believe something. The Sophist accepts an explanation of how someone could falsely believe something. The problem is to fit together what Plato rejects in the Theaetetus with what he accepts in the Sophist, given the intended unity of these two dialogues. ;The traditional solution is to take the Sophist's explanation of false speech and belief to be Plato's last word on the matter, to take that explanation as somehow overr…Read more