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164. Aristotle's Critique of False Utopias (II 1 – 12)In Otfried Höffe (ed.), Aristoteles: Politik, Akademie Verlag. pp. 49-61. 2011.
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1913. Plato's Comparison of Just and Unjust LivesIn Otfried Höffe (ed.), Platon: Politeia, Akademie Verlag. pp. 271-290. 2005.
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Oysters and experience machines: two puzzles in value theoryIn Rosa Braidotti, Radhika Coomaraswamy, Richard Kraut, Dorothy E. Roberts, Seana Valentine Shiffrin, Melanne Verveer & Mark Matheson (eds.), The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, The University of Utah Press. 2018.
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5Plato against democracy : a defenseIn David Owen Brink, Susan Sauvé Meyer & Christopher John Shields (eds.), Virtue, happiness, knowledge: themes from the work of Gail Fine and Terence Irwin, Oxford University Press. 2018.
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2257Introduction to the Study of PlatoIn David Ebrey & Richard Kraut (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Plato, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press. pp. 1-38. 2022.This chapter offers a guide to reading Plato’s dialogues, including an overview of his corpus. We recommend first considering each dialogue as its own unified work, before considering how it relates to the others. In general, the dialogues explore ideas and arguments, rather than presenting parts of a comprehensive philosophical system that settles on final answers. The arc of a dialogue frequently depends on who the individual interlocutors are. We argue that the traditional division of the cor…Read more
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207. Flourishing: The Central Concept of Practical ThoughtIn Douglas Cairns, Fritz-Gregor Herrmann & Terrence Penner (eds.), Pursuing the Good: Ethics and Metaphysics in Plato's Republic, University of Edinburgh. pp. 154-167. 2007.
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64Socrates and the StatePrinceton University Press. 1984.This fresh outlook on Socrates' political philosophy in Plato's early dialogues argues that it is both more subtle and less authoritarian than has been supposed. Focusing on the Crito, Richard Kraut shows that Plato explains Socrates' refusal to escape from jail and his acceptance of the death penalty as arising not from a philosophy that requires blind obedience to every legal command but from a highly balanced compromise between the state and the citizen. In addition, Professor Kraut contends …Read more
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91Critique of Agnes Callard, AspirationPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 102 (2): 470-474. 2021.
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74Some Ancient Greek and Twentieth-Century Theories of ValueGrazer Philosophische Studien 97 (3): 374-385. 2020.Plato puts goodness at the center of all practical thinking but offers no definition of it and implies that philosophy must find one. Aristotle demurs, arguing that there is no such thing as universal goodness. What we need, instead, is an understanding of the human good. Plato and Aristotle are alike in the attention they give to the category of the beneficial, and they agree that since some things are beneficial only as means, there must be others that are non-derivatively beneficial. When G. …Read more
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111The Value of Humanity, by L. Nandi TheunissenMind 131 (521): 259-267. 2022._ The Value of Humanity _, by Nandi TheunissenL.. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020. Pp. xiii + 159.
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87Aristotle on the Perfect LifePhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 55 (3): 731-733. 1995.This book is a concise, lucid and helpful discussion of some themes that Anthony Kenny has been exploring for many years. He published an excellent essay, one still worth reading, about Aristotle on eudaimonia in the 1965–66 Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society. Then in 1978, he created a sensation with The Aristotelian Ethics, in which he challenged the widespread assumption of the philosophical and scholarly world that the Nicomachean Ethics is a much improved revision of the Eudemian Ethic…Read more
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92On Ideas: Aristotle's Criticism of Plato's Theory of FormsPhilosophical Review 104 (1): 114. 1995.
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586What Is Good and Why: The Ethics of Well-BeingHarvard University Press. 2007.What is good, how do we know, and how important is it? In this book, one of our most respected analytical philosophers reorients these questions around the notion of what causes human beings to flourish. Observing that we can sensibly address what is good for plants and animals no less than what is good for people, Kraut applies a general principle to the entire living world: what is good for complex organisms consists in the exercise of their natural powers.
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The Political KakonIn Pavlos Kontos (ed.), Evil in Aristotle, Cambridge University Press. pp. 170-188. 2018.
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60Review Article — Internal ends and the Viability of Aristotle’s EthicsPolis 24 (2): 353-362. 2007.
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Desire and the Human GoodIn Thomas L. Carson & Paul K. Moser (eds.), Morality and the good life, Oxford University Press. 1997.
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60The Quality of Life: Aristotle RevisedOxford University Press. 2018.Richard Kraut presents a new theory of human well-being. Kraut's principal idea, Aristotelian in spirit, is that 'external goods' have at most an indirect bearing on the quality of our lives. A good internal life - one with quality emotional, intellectual, social, and perceptual experiences - is what well-being consists in.
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Comments on ‘Disunity in the Aristotelian Virtues’ by T. H. IrwinOxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 79-86. 1988.
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180What is Good and Why: The Ethics of Well-beingAnalysis 69 (3): 576-578. 2009.Anyone familiar with Richard Kraut's work in ancient philosophy will be excited to see him putting aside the dusty tomes of the ancients and delving into ethics first-hand. He does not disappoint. His book is a lucid and wide-ranging discussion that provides at least the core of an ethical theory and an appealing set of answers to a range of ethical questions.Kraut aims to provide an alternative to utilitarianism that preserves the good-centred nature of that theory. He claims that all justifica…Read more
Richard Kraut
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