Cornell University
Sage School of Philosophy
PhD, 1967
Seattle, Washington, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy
  •  133
    The Concept of Pleasure (review)
    Philosophical Review 78 (3): 386-390. 1969.
    Review of The Concept of Pleasure, by David L. Perry (Mouton:1967)
  •  272
    Substances
    In Georgios Anagnostopoulos (ed.), A Companion to Aristotle, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
    This is a survey of Aristotle's development of the concept of substance in the Categories and Book VII (Zeta) of the Metaphysics. We begin with the Categories conception of a primary substance as that which is not "in a subject" -- i.e., not ontologically dependent on anything else -- and also not "said of a subject" -- i.e., not predicated of any item beneath it in its categorial tree. This gives us the idea of primary substances as ontologically basic individuals, the fundamental subjects of p…Read more
  •  376
    Aristotle's metaphysics
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2016.
    The first major work in the history of philosophy to bear the title "Metaphysics" was the treatise by Aristotle that we have come to know by that name. But Aristotle himself did not use that title or even describe his field of study as 'metaphysics'; the name was evidently coined by the first century C.E. editor who assembled the treatise we know as Aristotle's Metaphysics out of various smaller selections of Aristotle's works. The title 'metaphysics' -- literally, 'after the Physics' -- very li…Read more
  •  337
    Wants and lacks
    with Gareth B. Matthews
    Journal of Philosophy 64 (14): 455-456. 1967.
    Anthony Kenny says it is impossible to want what one already has and knows one has. We present a counter-example and then suggest that Kenny may have been misled by the fact that wanting expresses itself in goal-directed behavior. From the truism that one's behavior cannot be directed toward a goal that one knows one has already attained, Kenny may have been led to suppose that behavior directed toward an as yet unattained goal cannot express one's desire for what one has and knows one has.