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13Rudimentary remarks on comparing ancient Chinese and Greco-Roman ethicsIn R. A. H. King & Dennis Schilling (eds.), How Should One Live?: Comparing Ethics in Ancient China and Greco-Roman Antiquity, De Gruyter. pp. 3-17. 2011.
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118Late Antique Epistemology. Other Ways to TruthInternational Journal of the Platonic Tradition 5 (1): 195-197. 2011.
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38Nutrition and fatigue : some remarks on the status of Theophrastus' Peri kopōnIn William W. Fortenbaugh & Georg Wöhrle (eds.), On the Opuscula of Theophrastus: Akten der 3. Tagung der Karl-und-Gertrud-Abel-Stiftung vom 19.-23. Juli 1999 in Trier, Franz Steiner Verlag. 2002.not available.
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91Aristotle and Plotinus on MemoryWalter de Gruyter. 2009.Two treatises on memory which have come down to us from antiquity are Aristotle’s “On memory and recollection” and Plotinus’ “On perception and memory” ; the latter also wrote at length about memory in his “Problems connected with the soul”. In both authors memory is treated as a ‘modest’ faculty: both authors assume the existence of a persistent subject to whom memory belongs; and basic cognitive capacities are assumed on which memory depends. In particular, both theories use phantasia to expla…Read more
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74Aristotle on life and deathDuckworth. 2000.Aristotle's "Parva Naturalia" culminates in definitions of the stages of the life cycle, from the generation of a new living thing up to death. This book provides a detailed reading of the end of the "Parva Naturalia" and shows how it completes the investigation into life begun in the "De Anima".
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40The concept of life and the life cycle in De IuventuteIn S. Föllinger (ed.), Was Ist 'Leben'? Aristoteles' Anschauungen Zur Entsehung Und Funktionsweise von 'Leben', . pp. 171-188. 2010.No abstract available.
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27Nutrition and Hylomorphism in AristotleIn Giouli Korobili & Roberto Lo Presti (eds.), Nutrition and Nutritive Soul in Aristotle and Aristotelianism, De Gruyter. pp. 43-62. 2020.Nutrition provides Aristotle a way of distinguishing form and matter in living things. It also provides the way of binding form and matter. On the one hand, living activity takes part in continuously different matter, in any individual. On the other, nutrition, specified by any one indivisible kind of living thing, must take part in matter of the requisite kind. Between them these two facts explain the sense in which living is in a subject without being an attribute. For the soul is the cause of…Read more
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132G. J. Hughes: Aristotle on Ethics . Pp. x + 238. London: Routledge, 2001. Cased, £35 . ISBN: 0-415-22186-2The Classical Review 52 (2): 372-373. 2002.
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128Lloyd Ancient Worlds, Modern Reflections. Pp. 240. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2004. Cased, £27.50, US$35.00. ISBN: 0-19-927016-3The Classical Review 56 (1): 237-239. 2006.
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99Plotinus on Eγδaimonia - McGroarty Plotinus on Eudaimonia. A Commentary on Ennead 1.4. Pp. xxiv + 236. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. Cased, £50. ISBN: 978-0-19-928712-3 (review)The Classical Review 60 (1): 88-90. 2010.
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86IX—Universality and argument inMencius Iia6Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 111 (2_pt_2): 275-293. 2011.In Menciusiia6 all humans are said to have ‘a heart that does not bear the suffering of others’. I argue that this statement is illustrated, rather than proven, by the example of our reaction to a child about to fall into a well. This illustration can be located at the most basic level of ethical universals (it is a universal example): basic ethical training; further steps in a ladder of reflection are universal reflection on ethical norms themselves, which may finally be related universally to …Read more
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33Body and Soul in GalenIn Common to Body and Soul: Philosophical Approaches to Explaining Living Behaviour in Greco-Roman Antiquity, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 232-258. 2006.
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33Plato's phaulon skemma: On the Multifariousness of the Human SoulIn Common to Body and Soul: Philosophical Approaches to Explaining Living Behaviour in Greco-Roman Antiquity, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 103-120. 2006.
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26"Common to Soul and Body" in the Parva NaturaliaIn Common to Body and Soul: Philosophical Approaches to Explaining Living Behaviour in Greco-Roman Antiquity, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 121-139. 2006.
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29Life Beyond the Stars:Aristotle, Plato and EmpedoclesIn Common to Body and Soul: Philosophical Approaches to Explaining Living Behaviour in Greco-Roman Antiquity, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 49-102. 2006.
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18IntroductionIn Common to Body and Soul: Philosophical Approaches to Explaining Living Behaviour in Greco-Roman Antiquity, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 1-12. 2006.
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29Parmenides on ThinkingIn Common to Body and Soul: Philosophical Approaches to Explaining Living Behaviour in Greco-Roman Antiquity, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 13-30. 2006.
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26
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29General index of subjectsIn The Good Life and Conceptions of Life in Early China and Graeco-Roman Antiquity, De Gruyter. pp. 395-402. 2015.
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30Index locorumIn The Good Life and Conceptions of Life in Early China and Graeco-Roman Antiquity, De Gruyter. pp. 387-394. 2015.
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41Common to Body and Soul: Peripatetic Approaches After AristotleIn Common to Body and Soul: Philosophical Approaches to Explaining Living Behaviour in Greco-Roman Antiquity, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 165-186. 2006.
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71The Soul and its Instrumental Body. A Reinterpretation of Aristotle's Philosophy of Living Nature (review)The Classical Review 57 (2): 322-323. 2007.
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95Ren in the analects: Skeptical prolegomenaJournal of Chinese Philosophy 39 (1): 89-105. 2012.Ren in the Lunyu is often taken to be virtue; if virtue is taken to be excellence as performing a function, as Plato understands it, this is not persuasive. Nor is it easy to show how ren encompasses or implies all other virtues. Ren is furthermore ambiguous—it is used both in a wide sense and specifically as benevolence; in fact there are at least six accounts of what ren is in the Lunyu. This ambiguity cannot be made harmless by use of speech act theory, since commands, for example, require sa…Read more
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85Early Advaita Vedānta: The date and authorship of the Gauḍapādīya-kārikāIndo-Iranian Journal 38 (4): 317-355. 1995.
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69Is “Buddha-Nature” Buddhist?Numen 42 (1): 1-20. 1995.Recent controversies in Japanese Buddhist scholarship have focused upon the Mah y na notion of a “Buddha nature” within all sentient beings and whether or not the concept is compatible with traditional Buddhist teachings such as an tman. This controversy is not only relevant to Far Eastern Buddhism, for which the notion of a Buddha-nature is a central doctrinal theme, but also for the roots of this tradition in those Indian Mah y na s tras which utilised the notion of tath gatagarbha. One of the…Read more
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115Asparśa-yoga: Meditation and epistemology in the Gaudapādīya-KārikāJournal of Indian Philosophy 20 (1): 89-131. 1992.
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22Book reviews (review)Asian Philosophy 7 (2): 161-170. 1997.The Tao and the Logos: Literary Hermeneutics, East and West. Zhang Longxi, 1992 Duke University Press xviii + 239 pp., ISBN 0 8223 1218 2, pb $14.50 Ibn Sinā and Mysticism: Remarks and Admonitions. Shams C. Inati, 1996, London, Kegan Paul International, 114 pp., ISBN 0 7103 0482 X, hb £30.00 Ethics in Early Buddhism. David J. Kalupahana, 1995, Hawaii, University of Hawaii Press, ix+ 171 pp., ISBN 0 8248 1702 8, hb $27.00 On Understanding Buddhists. Essays on Theravāda Tradition in Sri Lanka. Joh…Read more
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University of GlasgowAssistant Professor
Glasgow, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland