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130Thomas Taylor’s Dissent from Some 18th-Century Views on Platonic Philosophy: The Ethical and Theological ContextInternational Journal of the Platonic Tradition 7 (2): 180-220. 2013.Thomas Taylor’s interpretation of Plato’s works in 1804 was condemned as guilty by association immediately after its publication. Taylor’s 1804 and 1809 reviewer thus made a hasty generalisation in which the qualities of Neoplatonism, assumed to be negative, were transferred to Taylor’s own interpretation, which made use of Neoplatonist thinkers. For this reason, Taylor has typically been marginalised as an interpreter of Plato. This article does not deny the association between Taylor and Neopl…Read more
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56Tannery and Duhem on the Concept of a System in the History of Philosophy and History of ScienceIntellectual History Review 21 (4): 515-531. 2011.No abstract.
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147Changing Interpretations of Plotinus: The 18th-Century Introduction of the Concept of a 'System of Philosophy'International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 7 (1): 50-98. 2013.This article critically explores the history and nature of a hermeneutic assumption which frequently guided interpretations of Plotinus from the 18th century onwards, namely that Plotinus advanced a system of philosophy. It is argued that this assumption was introduced relatively late, in the 18th and 19th centuries, and that it was primarily made possible by Brucker’s methodology for the history of philosophy, dating from the 1740s, to which the concept of a ‘system of philosophy’ was essential…Read more
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137The History of the History of Philosophy, and the Lost Biographical TraditionBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 20 (3): 619-625. 2012.
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26Vico and Literary Mannerism: A Study in the Early Vico and His Idea of Rhetoric and IngenuityPeter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der Wissenschaften. 1999.Shows how Italian philosopher Giambattista Vico (1668-1744) picked up ideas on metaphor and ingenuity from the literary rhetoric of the age and turned them into valuable concepts in a general theory of knowledge and the philosophy of history for which he is now mainly known. Also shows how his original position enabled him to criticize Descartes' idea of rationality. Appends translations of relevant passages from contemporary writers. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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139The concept &ldquosystem of philosophy&rdquo: The case of Jacob brucker's historiography of philosophy1History and Theory 44 (1): 72-90. 2005.In this essay I examine and discuss the concept “system of philosophy” as a methodological tool in the history of philosophy; I do so in two moves. First I analyze the historical origin of the concept in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Thereafter I undertake a discussion of its methodological weaknesses—a discussion that is not only relevant to the writing of history of philosophy in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, but also to the writing of history of philosophy in our times…Read more
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82Doxographical or Philosophical History of Philosophy: On Michael Frede's Precepts for Writing the History of PhilosophyHistory of European Ideas 42 (2): 178-194. 2016.SummaryIn a series of articles from the 1980s and 1990s, Michael Frede analysed the history of histories of philosophy written over the last three hundred years. According to Frede, modern scholars have degenerated into what he calls a ‘doxographical’ mode of writing the history of philosophy. Instead, he argued, these scholars should write what he called ‘philosophical’ history of philosophy, first established in the last decades of the seventeenth century but since abandoned. In the present ar…Read more
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71The Origin of the Division between Middle Platonism and NeoplatonismApeiron 46 (2): 31-65. 2013.The division of Ancient Platonism into Middle Platonism and Neoplatonism is a fairly new one. The conceptual foundation of this division was cemented in Jacob Brucker’s pioneering Historia critica philosophiae (1742-67). In the 1770s and 1780s, the term ‘Neoplatonism’ was coined on the basis of Brucker’s analysis. Three historiographical concepts were decisive to Brucker: ‘system of philosophy’, ‘eclecticism’ and ‘syncretism’. By means of these concepts, he characterized Middle Platonism and Neo…Read more
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5Review: Models of the History of Philosophy. Volume II: From Cartesian Age to Brucker, ed. by Gregorio Piaia and Giovanni Santinello,(International Archives of the History of Ideas, 204) (review)British Journal for the History of Philosophy. forthcoming.
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56The concept of contraction in Giordano Bruno's philosophyAshgate. 2005.Methods facilitating noetic ascent -- Contraction as an ontological concept -- Contraction and noesis -- Contraction and memory -- Physiologically induced contraction -- The scholastic tradition of contraction -- Cusanus and the scholastic tradition of contraction.
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2Miklós Vassányi, Anima mundi: The Rise of the World Soul Theory in Modern German PhilosophyIntellectual History Review 22 (2): 319-321. 2012.
Areas of Interest
| Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy |
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |