• Complete Causes
    Logique Et Analyse 24 (June): 231-244. 1981.
  •  61
    Although Western culture draws substantively on Athens and Jerusalem, hostility tends to be shown towards Jerusalem from the philosophical wing. I attempt to correct the imbalance. Philosophy, I argue, arose in the Greek context because of a problem of self‐confidence. ‘Philosophical rationality’ cannot therefore be taken as normative for rationality generally. The contrast between the Jerusalemite and the Athenian views of self and of the contrasting estimates and explanations of the efficacy o…Read more
  •  61
    Book review (review)
    Philosophia 8 (2-3): 509-515. 1978.
  •  1
    Intellectual intuition and cognitive assimilability
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 10 (3): 153-163. 1979.
  •  84
    Book reviews (review)
    with Kenneth S. Friedman, Donald Gotterbarn, Bryan G. Norton, David S. Schwarz, and Walter P. Van Stigt
    Philosophia 9 (1): 805-813. 1979.
  •  78
    Freedom and resentment and other essays
    Philosophia 6 (2): 321-332. 1976.
  •  90
    Interpreting bradley: the critique of fact-pluralism
    History and Philosophy of Logic 9 (2): 205-223. 1988.
    The typically dismissive treatment of Bradleian idealism, to the extent that it is based on philosophical criticism rather than historical bias, suffers from a failure to distinguish Bradley's negative views from his positive doctrines. But the intermingling of the two plays havoc in Bradley's own presentation, so that proper interpretation requires a particularly aggressive approach to the texts. Specifically, in denying a real multiplicity of facts, Bradley, though he may seem to be, is not at…Read more
  •  1
  •  57
    Progress and regress in philosophy
    Philosophia 5 (4): 529-540. 1975.
  •  20
    The Structure of Cartesian Scepticism
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 21 (3): 343-357. 2010.
  •  45
    Cartesian Probability and Cognitive Structure
    Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 36 (4). 1982.
  •  38
  •  91
    Tractatus: Pluralism or monism?
    Mind 89 (353): 17-36. 1980.
  •  135
    Kant’s ‘Critical’ Rationalism: The Dialectical Dimension
    Idealistic Studies 22 (2): 107-121. 1992.
    Matter, in Aristotle’s Metaphysics, plays a prototypical version of a rôle that recurs, refracted through the domestic preoccupations of each age, in metaphysical analyses of the constitution of the real. After identifying the rôle, I shall trace a developmental arc of philosophical treatment from Aristotle through the Cartesian period to Kant. The mature Kantian view of the rôle—the ‘critical’ view—is, I maintain, a reversion to the Aristotelian position. It is not however a simple reversion. I…Read more