University of Pittsburgh
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1993
New York City, New York, United States of America
  •  163
    Conditional irony in the Socratic dialogues
    Classical Quarterly 49 (02): 456-. 1999.
    Socratic irony is potentially fertile ground for exegetical abuse. It can seem to offer an interpreter the chance to dismiss any claim which conflicts with his account of Socratic Philosophy merely by crying ‘irony’. If abused in this way, Socratic irony can quickly become a convenient receptacle for everything inimical to an interpretation. Much recent scholarship rightly reacts against this and devotes itself to explaining how Socrates actually means everything he says, at least everything of …Read more