•  60
    Review of eyjlfur kjalar Emilsson, Plotinus on Intellect (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (3). 2008.
  •  89
    The Rhetoric of Suicide
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 20 (3). 1987.
  •  110
    Word and image in ancient greece
    British Journal of Aesthetics 42 (4): 430-432. 2002.
  • Manfred RIEDEL, "Rehabilitierung der praktischen Philosophie" (review)
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 29 (1): 187. 1975.
  •  133
    Plotinus on self: The philosophy of the 'we' (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 48 (2). 2010.
    Plotinus's theory of dual selfhood is one of the best-known and most puzzling aspects of his philosophy. Each human being, he held, is both a compound of body and soul and a discarnate member of the hypostasis Intellect. He built evaluative norms into this duality, all of which derive from what he argued to be the ontological superiority of the discarnate element in us over the body-soul compound. This led him, in turn, to claim that the best and happiest human life is a life of self-purificatio…Read more
  • Ouvrages reçus
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 23 (4=90): 528. 1969.
  •  93
    Proclus and the Platonic Muse
    Ancient Philosophy 31 (2): 363-380. 2011.
  •  113
    G.R. Boys-Stones and J.H. Haubold, Plato and Hesiod, Oxford University Press, 2010
    International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 4 (2): 209-215. 2010.
  •  58
    Plato: Ion or: On the Iliad
    International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 3 (2): 176-180. 2009.
  •  176
    Plotinus and his portrait
    British Journal of Aesthetics 37 (3): 211-225. 1997.
  •  235
    On interpreting Plato's Ion
    Phronesis 49 (2): 169-201. 2004.
    Plato's "Ion," despite its frail frame and traditionally modest status in the corpus, has given rise to large exegetical claims. Thus some historians of aesthetics, reading it alongside page 205 of the Symposium, have sought to identify in it the seeds of the post-Kantian notion of 'art' as non-technical making, and to trace to it the Romantic conception of the poet as a creative genius. Others have argued that, in the "Ion," Plato has Socrates assume the existence of a technē of poetry. In this…Read more
  •  40
    Plato and Hesiod (review)
    International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 4 (2): 209-215. 2010.
  • Revue Des revues
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 23 (4=90): 535. 1969.
  •  2
    Hommage à Jean HYPPOLITE
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 23 (4=90): 548. 1969.
  •  19
    Consciousness and Introspection in Plotinus and Augustine
    Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 22 145-174. 2006.
  •  42
    Le rôle du concept d'intention dans la formation du jugement esthétique
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 83 (2): 197-213. 1985.
  •  37
    Book reviews
    British Journal of Aesthetics 36 (2): 189-191. 1996.
  •  95
    Hesiod's Proem And Plato's Ion
    Classical Quarterly 64 (1): 25-42. 2014.
    Plato's Hesiod is a neglected topic, scholars having long regarded Plato's Homer as a more promising field of inquiry. My aim in this chapter is to demonstrate that this particular bias of scholarly attention, although understandable, is unjustified. Of no other dialogue is this truer than of the Ion
  •  29
    Collingwood: Science Versus Ethics
    der 16. Weltkongress Für Philosophie 2 1282-1289. 1983.
    Is scientific reasoning the standard of rationality? Can historical explanation be reduced to the scientific mode of reasoning? R.G. Collingwood answered both questions negatively. He further attempted to show that the types of justification used to account for moral actions are closely similar to historical explanations. His ethics has thus a strong historicist and relativistio flavour. Hie aim of my paper is to state Collingwood's ethical views and to show that the "ethical judgment", which in…Read more
  • Book Review (review)
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 29 (111/112): 187. 1975.
  •  214
    The status of beauty in Plotinus' metaphysics is unclear: is it a Form in Intellect, the Intelligible Principle itself, or the One? Basing themselves on a number of well-known passages in the "Enneads," and assuming that Plotinus' Forms are similar in function and status to Plato's, many scholars hold that Plotinus theorized beauty as a determinate entity in Intellect. Such assumptions, it is here argued, lead to difficulties over self-predication, the interpretation of Plotinus's rich and varie…Read more