Heather Reid

Morningside College
  •  171
    The Political Heritage of the Olympic Games: Relevance, Risks, and Possible Rewards
    Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 6 (2): 108-122. 2012.
    The Olympic movement sometimes claims that sport has nothing to do with politics, yet its goal of promoting peace is explicitly political. The Olympics' association with peace, furthermore, is inherited from the ancient version of the festival which took place in a very distant time and place. This essay examines the ancient political heritage of the Olympic Games and questions its relevance to such modern Olympic challenges as globalisation, cultural hegemony, social discrimination and environm…Read more
  •  126
    Sport, Philosophy, and the Quest for Knowledge
    Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 36 (1): 40-49. 2009.
    No abstract
  •  11
    Olympic Epistemology: the Athletic Roots of Philosophical Reasoning
    Skepsis: A Journal for Philosophy and Interdisciplinary Research 18 (1-2): 19-28. 2007.
    The ancient world witnessed a meaningful transition in the conception of human thought and belief. What some have called the “discovery” of the mind can also be understood as a release from dependence on oracular wisdom and mythological explanation, made possible by the invention of more reliable and democratic methods for discovering and explaining truths. During roughly the same epoch, Hellenic sport distinguished itself by developing objective mechanisms for selecting single winners from vari…Read more
  •  89
    Aristotle's pentathlete
    Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 4 (2): 183-94. 2010.
    Beauty varies with each age. In a young man, it consists in possessing a body capable of enduring all efforts, either of the racecourse or of bodily strength, while he himself is pleasant to look u...