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121Santayana’s Philosophy of MindThe Monist 48 (3): 419-440. 1964.The history of philosophy resembles a convention of deaf-mutes. Each participant attempts to communicate the secrets of his private imagination through a swirl of silent gestures. Intent on disclosing his own insight, each is confined in his own world: he has no ear for the language of others and often little knowledge of how to make them understand his. The carnival of controversy which ensues is grotesque in the eyes of the outsider but tragic for the thoughtful participant. For in the history…Read more
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42Substance and Matter: A Response to Angus Kerr-LawsonTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 39 (3). 2003.
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34Peirce, Santayana and the Large FactsTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 16 (1). 1980.
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73Rescher’s Cognitive PragmatismContemporary Pragmatism 6 (1): 169-178. 2009.The aim of this article is to examine the structure, appreciate some of the strengths and criticize a major weakness of Rescher's pragmatism. Rescher's pragmatic commitments are well-articulated. His reasons for embracing realism are strikingly similar to Santayana's. His insistence, however, that inquiry and communication constitute central human activities privileges talk, propositional knowledge and cognitive achievement. His position would be stronger if he placed cognitive activities in the…Read more
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121Santayana on America. Edited by Richard C. Lyon. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, Inc. 1968. Pp. 307. $3.75 (review)Dialogue 12 (2): 370-371. 1973.
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43Remarks on the 25th Anniversary of SAAPNewsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 26 (80): 8-12. 1998.
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Report of the Business Meeting. Charles S. Peirce Society, December 28, 1985Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 22 (3): 369-373. 1986.
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86Physician-Assisted SuicideIn Arthur L. Caplan & Robert Arp (eds.), Contemporary debates in bioethics, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 25--203. 2013.
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14Reply to LeeIn Arthur L. Caplan & Robert Arp (eds.), Contemporary debates in bioethics, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 25--222. 2013.
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26Marxist Philosophy: A Bibliographical GuideUniversity of North Carolina Press. 2012.Marxist Philosophy: A Bibliographical Guide.
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Primitive naturalismIn John R. Shook & Paul Kurtz (eds.), The future of naturalism, Humanity Books. 2009.
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60Pre-Socratic Categories In FichteIdealistic Studies 6 (2): 160-168. 1976.The most enduring philosophical concepts are prereflective. They are firmly founded in primitive experience. By their use the most improbable of our philosophical fancies acquires plausibility: for however much what we say might seem a free construction, do we not see the same features and the same process, attenuated perhaps but real, before our eyes?
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92Meddling: On the Virtue of Leaving Others AloneIndiana University Press. 2014.John Lachs claims that we are surrounded by people who seem to know what is good for us better than we do ourselves. Lachs discusses the joy of choice and the rare virtue of leaving others alone to lead their lives as they see fit. He does not mean that we abandon them in their genuine hour of need, but that we aid them on their own terms and not make help conditional upon adopting approved beliefs and behaviors. Lachs believes help needs to be temporary to discourage dependence. He contends tha…Read more
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48Mill and Constant: A Neglected Connection in the History of the Idea of LibertyHistory of Philosophy Quarterly 9 (1). 1992.
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33Mind And PhilosophersNashville: Vanderbilt University Press. 1987.The essays collected in this volume and written between 1959-1980 clearly belong to professional philosophy in both tone and context. Yet their ultimate aim is to explore larger problems and to set the groundwork for dealing with them. For the focus of attention throughout is human nature, not so much in the details of its structure or its social and moral manifestations as in its most general features and constituents. What sort of beings we are and how mind and body are related is the question…Read more
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43Marxist philosophyUniversity of North Carolina Press. 1967.Marxist Philosophy: A Bibliographical Guide
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2Is There an Absolute Self? in Fichte and Contemporary PhilosophyPhilosophical Forum 19 (2-3): 169-181. 1988.
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93How relative are values? Or are nazis irrational and why the answer mattersSouthern Journal of Philosophy 28 (3): 319-328. 1990.
John Lachs
(1934 - 2023)
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