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65'Medical ethics'--an alternative approachJournal of Medical Ethics 12 (3): 145-150. 1986.Contemporary medical ethics is generally concerned with the application of ethical theory to medico-moral dilemmas and with the critical analysis of the concepts of medicine. This paper presents an alternative programme: the development of a medical philosophy which, by taking as its starting point the two questions: what is man? and, what constitutes goodness in life? offers an account of health as one of the primary concepts of value. This view of the subject resembles that implied by ancient …Read more
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368Aquinas on human ensoulment, abortion and the value of lifePhilosophy 78 (2): 255-278. 2003.Although there is a significant number of books and essays in which Aquinas's thought is examined in some detail, there are still many aspects of his writings that remain unknown to those outside the field of Thomistic studies; or which are generally misunderstood. An example is Aquinas's account of the origins of individual human life. This is the subject of a chapter in a recent book by Robert Pasnau on Thomas Aquinas on Human Nature (Cambridge: CUP, 2001). Since there will be readers whose on…Read more
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81Thomas Reid By Keith Lehrer London: Routledge, 1989, xii + 311 pp., £35.00 (review)Philosophy 66 (256): 252-. 1991.
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2Some metaphysical presuppositions of agency, agere-sequitur-esse (acting-follows-upon-being)Heythrop Journal-a Quarterly Review of Philosophy and Theology 35 (3): 296-303. 1994.
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41Aquinas on Mind By Anthony Kenny London:Routledge, 1993, viii+182pp., £30.00 (review)Philosophy 69 (268): 242-. 1994.
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10.3 ResponseLogos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 5 (2). 2002.
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2Psychoanalysis, cognitive psychology and self-consciousnessIn Peter A. Clark & Crispin Wright (eds.), Mind, Psychoanalysis, and Science, Blackwell. 1988.
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260Brentano's ProblemGrazer Philosophische Studien 35 (1): 1-32. 1989.Contemporary writers often refer to 'Brentano's Problem' meaning by this the issue of whether all intentional phenomena can be accounted for in terms of a materialist ontology. This, however, was not the problem of intentionaUty which concerned Brentano himself. Rather, the difficulty which he identified is that of how to explain the very contentfulness of mental states, and in particular their apparently relational character. This essay explores something of Brentano's own views on this issue a…Read more
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124Notes and commentsHeythrop Journal 26 (1): 41-46. 1985.Two Short Communications:R. A. Markus, Gregory the Great and In I Regum, by Francis ClarkAquinas's Claim ‘Anima Mea Non Est Ego’, by Stephen Priest
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37Atheism and TheismWiley-Blackwell. 2002.In this book two philosophers, each committed to unambiguous versions of belief and disbelief, debate the central issues of atheism and theism. Considers one of the oldest and most widely disputed philosophical questions: is there a God? Presents the atheism/theism issue in the form of philosophical debate between two highly regarded scholars, widely praised for the clarity and verve of their work. This second edition contains new essays by each philosopher, responding to criticisms and building…Read more
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178Is the Soul the Form of the Body?American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 87 (3): 481-493. 2013.The idea of the soul, though once common in discussions of human nature, is rarely considered in contemporary philosophy. This reflects a general physicalist turn; but besides commitment to various forms of materialism there is the objection that the very idea of the soul is incoherent. The notion of soul considered here is a broadly Aristotelian-Thomistic one according to which it is both the form of a living human being and something subsistent on its own account. Having discussed the conceptu…Read more
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112An embarrassing question about reproductionPhilosophical Psychology 5 (4): 427-431. 1992.Standard objections to dualism focus on problems of individuation: what, in the absence of matter, serves to diversify immaterial items? and interaction: how can material and immaterial elements causally affect one another? Given certain ways of conceiving mental phenomena and causation, it is not obvious that one cannot reply to these objections. However, a different kind of difficulty comes into view when one considers the question of the origin of the mental. Here attention is directed upon t…Read more
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68Political theory and the nature of persons: An ineliminable metaphysical presuppositionPhilosophical Papers 20 (2): 77-95. 1991.No abstract
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67Realism, Mind and EvolutionPhilosophical Investigations 36 (2): 97-113. 2013.Perceptual experience is perspectival, and human minds occupy a variety of “viewpoints.” These considerations provide grounds for both realist and anti-realist philosophies. Each is represented in adjacent areas of thought, and often connects with familiar debates between “conservatives” and “liberals,” which in turn are commonly related to disputes about religious and naturalistic accounts of the world and of the place of human beings within it. These have been joined from an orthogonal directi…Read more
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84What Future has Catholic Philosophy?Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 71 79-90. 1997.
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111Family mattersPhilosophy 81 (4): 581-594. 2006.Governments and international bodies continue to praise the family for its service to the good of individuals and of society. Among its important contributions are the rearing of children and the care of the elderly. So far as the former is concerned, however, the family is subject to increasing criticism and suggestions are made for further state intervention, particularly in the area of education. In response to this challenge I consider the natural operation of the family in relation to the d…Read more
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122Philosophy, the restless heart and the meaning of theismRatio 19 (4). 2006.There is a common philosophical challenge that asks how things would be different if some supposed reality did not exist. Conceived in one way this can amount to trial by sensory verification. Even if that challenge is dismissible, however, the question of the relation of the purported reality to experience remains. Writing here in connection with the central claims, and human significance, of theism; and drawing on ideas suggested by C. S. Pierce, C. S. Lewis, Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aqui…Read more