•  211
    Annotations to the Speech of the Muses (Plato Republic 546b-c)
    with Kathleen McNamee
    Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 144 31-50. 2003.
    Annotations to the Speech of the Muses (Plato Republic 546b-c).
  •  214
    Locke's Image of the World
    Oxford University Press. 2017.
    Michael Jacovides provides an engaging account of how the scientific revolution influenced one of the foremost figures of early modern philosophy, John Locke. By placing Locke's thought in its scientific, religious, and anti-scholastic contexts, Jacovides explains not only what Locke believes but also why he believes it.
  •  300
    How Berkeley corrupted his capacity to conceive
    Philosophia 37 (3): 415-429. 2008.
    Berkeley’s capacity to conceive of mind-independent bodies was corrupted by his theory of representation. He thought that representation of things outside the mind depended on resemblance. Since ideas can resemble nothing than ideas, and all ideas are mind dependent, he concluded that we couldn’t form ideas of mind-independent bodies. More generally, he thought that we had no inner resembling proxies for mind-independent bodies, and so we couldn’t even form a notion of such things. Because conce…Read more
  •  526
    Locke’s Resemblance Theses
    Philosophical Review 108 (4): 461-496. 1999.
    Locke asserts that “the Ideas of primary Qualities of Bodies, are Resemblances of them, and their Patterns do really exist in the Bodies themselves; But the Ideas, produced in us by these Secondary Qualities, have no resemblance of them at all.”1 On an unsophisticated way of taking his words, he means that ideas of primary qualities are like the qualities they represent and ideas of secondary qualities are unlike the qualities they represent.2 I will show that if we take his assertions in this u…Read more