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125Of Children, Fools and Madmen: Spinoza’s Scientific Method and the Constraint of FactSouthwest Philosophy Review 2 30-42. 1985."Of Children, Fools, and Madmen: Spinoza's Scientific Method and the Constraints of Fact" Spinoza has been largely ignored in the history of the scientific method in the seventeenth century. Such neglect is unjustified insofar as Spinoza deliberately circumscribed with scientific method both Biblical hermeneutics (TTP), a field which he deserves credit for founding, and political theory (TP). Although he wrote no discrete discourse on method, he wove his scientific methodological principles into…Read more
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1278Tragedy off-stageIn Frisbee Sheffield (ed.), Plato's Symposium: the ethics of desire, Oxford University Press. 2006.I argue that the tragedies envisioned by the Symposium are two, both of which are introduced in the dialogue: (i) within months of Agathon's victory, half the characters who celebrated with him suffer death or exile on charges of impiety; (ii) Socrates is executed weeks after the dramatic date of the frame. Thus the most defensible notion of tragedy across Plato's dialogues is a fundamentally epistemological one: if we do not know the good, we increase our risk of making mistakes and of suffe…Read more
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580Plato's Republic in Its Athenian ContextHistory of Political Thought 33 (1): 1-23. 2012.Plato's Republic critiques Athenian democracy as practised during the Peloponnesian War years. The diseased city Socrates attempts to purge mirrors Athens in crucial particulars, and his proposals should be evaluated as counter-weights to existing institutions and practices, not as absolutes to be instantiated. Plato's assessment of the Athenian polity incorporates two strategies -- one rhetorical, the other argumentative -- both of which I address. Failure to consider Athens a catalyst for Socr…Read more
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62Epitaph For The Third ManAuslegung 6 6-23. 1978.The "third man" argument presented in plato's "parmenides" is valid against any articulated version of the theory of forms. Plato recognized this fact, yet continued to hold the theory because the most fundamental description of what is (the "unwritten theory") cannot be articulated and does not fall victim to the third man
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55Annotated Bibliography of Spinoza and the SciencesIn Marjorie Grene & Debra Nails (eds.), Spinoza And The Sciences, Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 305--314. 1986.
East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Classical Greek Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Metaphysics |