• Don’t Interrupt My Dialogue!
    In C. T. (ed.), Thinking through Dialogue, Practical Philosophy Press. pp. 239-243. 2001.
  •  114
    Three Questionable Assumptions of Philosophical Counseling
    International Journal of Philosophical Practice 2 (1): 1-32. 2004.
    Philosophical practice or counseling has been described as a cluster of meth­ods for treating everyday problems and predicaments through philosophical means. Not­withstanding the variety of methods, philosophical counselors seem to share the following tenets: 1. The counselee is autonomous; 2. Philosophical counseling differs from psychological counseling and 3. Philosophical counseling is effective in solving predicaments. A critical examination shows these to be problematic at both theoretical…Read more
  • Spinoza’s Ethics in Global Management
    Journal of Global Studies 4 (1): 123-138. 2012.
  • Philosophers, Ethics, and Emotions
    Philosophical Practice 4 (2): 447-458. 2009.
    In this paper I continue to probe the roles of philosophy and psychology in moral education. In a previous article published in this journal, I criticized the moral views of various schools of psychotherapy, and argued that philosophers are the sole professionals equipped to teach normative morality in a pluralistic, critical, and reasoned way. In this paper, I argue that effective moral education involves emotional education; that philosophers’ views of emotions tend to be reductive, and when t…Read more
  •  134
    _An exploration of philosophical and religious ideas about humor in modern philosophy and their secular implications._.
  •  1
    The Unconscious: Freud versus Sartre
    In Peter Raabe (ed.), Philosophical Practice and the Unconscious, Trivium Publications. pp. 23-78. 2006.
  • Rationality as Passion: Plato’s Theory of Love
    Practical Philosophy 4 (3): 6-14. 2001.
  • Lydia Amir
    In Bresson Ladegaard Knox, Berg Olsen Friis & J. Kyrre (eds.), Philosophical Practice: 5 Questions, Automatic Press. pp. 1-14. 2013.