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11Family Trees: Sympathy, Comparison, and the Proliferation of the Passions in Hume and his PredecessorsIn Martin Pickavé & Lisa Shapiro (eds.), Emotion and cognitive life in Medieval and early modern philosophy, Oxford University Press. pp. 255-278. 2012.Hume dubbed his _Treatise_ account of the passions “new and extraordinary” — an assessment echoed by many contemporary scholars, who find his analysis of the social operation of the emotions particularly innovative. But Hume's explanation of how passions and sentiments are transferred, shared, reflected, and reverberate among persons through the mechanisms of sympathy, has several important precursors, including both Shaftesbury and Hutcheson. Even more strikingly, Malebranche describes mechanis…Read more
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Where is my mind?: locating the mind metaphysically in HobbesIn Rebecca Copenhaver (ed.), History of the Philosophy of Mind, Vol. 4: Philosophy of Mind in the Early Modern and Modern Ages, Routledge. 2018.
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2Managing Mockery: Reason, Passions and the Good Life among Early Modern Women PhilosophersIn Karen Detlefsen & Lisa Shapiro (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Women and Early Modern European Philosophy, Routledge. pp. 240-253. 2023.
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Negotiating Pluralism in Taste and Character: Reading the Second Enquiry with "Of the Standard of Taste"In Jacqueline Taylor (ed.), Reading Hume on the Principles of Morals, Oxford University Press. pp. 219-237. 2020.
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99A common measure: Hobbes on the epistemic functions of public reasonSouthern Journal of Philosophy 63 (2): 275-290. 2025.Thomas Hobbes claims that the sovereign of a commonwealth provides a “common measure,” determining what counts as right reason for its subjects. As a form of public reason, this is often taken to be a purely political notion. I maintain that Hobbes holds that the public reason of the sovereign also provides a number of epistemic benefits both to the commonwealth and to individuals. Some are a matter of providing conditions that allow for the social growth of knowledge (particularly what Hobbes c…Read more
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2I've got a little list" : classification, explanation, and the focal passions in Descartes and HobbesIn Alix Cohen & Robert Stern (eds.), Thinking About the Emotions: A Philosophical History, Oxford University Press. pp. 109-129. 2017.Although taxonomy is often a dull and dusty business, it thrived among seventeenth-century writers on the passions. Most authors followed earlier taxonomies found in Aristotle, the Stoics and Aquinas. But a few adventurous souls such as Descartes and Hobbes produced genuinely innovative enumerations, which differed from what had gone before by identifying different lists and numbers of passions, positing novel principles of divisions, and redrawing ‘family’ groupings. A particularly telling inno…Read more
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51Enlightenment LiberalismIn Randall Curren (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Education, Wiley-blackwell. 2007.This chapter contains sections titled: Editor's Prologue Descartes John Locke John Stuart Mill.
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65Editors' Note to Volume 45, Special Book IssueHume Studies 45 (1): 1-2. 2019.This volume of Hume Studies is a special double-issue devoted to discussions of four recent books on Hume: Hume: an Intellectual Biography, by James Harris; Imagined Causes: Hume's Conception of Objects, by Stefanie Rocknak; Hume's True Scepticism, by Donald Ainslie; and Reflecting Subjects: Passion, Sympathy, and Society in Hume's Philosophy, by Jacqueline Taylor. The latter three discussions began as Author-Meets-Critics sessions at the 43rd International Hume Conference in Sydney, Australia, …Read more
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83Editors' Introduction for Volume 42Hume Studies 42 (1): 3-7. 2019.The new editorial team, Ann Levey, Karl Schafer and Amy Schmitter, are very pleased to present this special double-issue of Hume Studies. It contains a wide variety of articles on subjects old and new, as well as an assortment of book reviews, commissioned by the new book review editor, David Landy of San Francisco State University. We are grateful to the many people who have helped us get this volume and our tenure as editors underway, including the preceding editors-in-chief, Angela Coventry a…Read more
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94Mary Shepherd’s Essays on the Perception of an External UniverseAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 101 (2): 516-516. 2023.A very welcome addition to the Oxford New Histories of Philosophy, this new edition of Shepherd’s 1827 book comprises the lengthy ‘Essay on the Academical or Sceptical Philosophy’ and fourteen shor...
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83Jennifer Montagu, The Expression of The Passions: The Origin and Influence of Charles Lebrun'S "Conférence Sur L'Expression Générale Et Particulière"Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 54 (4): 384-385. 1996.
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136Cartesian Social Epistemology? Contemporary Social Epistemology and Early Modern PhilosophyRoczniki Filozoficzne 68 (2): 155-178. 2020.Many contemporary social epistemologists take themselves to be combatting an individualist approach to knowledge typified by Descartes. Although I agree that Descartes presents an individualist picture of scientific knowledge, he does allow some practical roles for reliance on the testimony and beliefs of others. More importantly, however, his reasons for committing to individualism raise important issues for social epistemology, particularly about how reliance on mere testimony can propagate pr…Read more
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57Descartes's Imagination: Proportion, Images, and the Activity of Thinking (review)Review of Metaphysics 50 (2): 424-425. 1996.1996 marks the 400th anniversary of Descartes' birth, and it seems only appropriate that it should bring a reevaluation of Descartes' thought and his place in the history of philosophy. Dennis Sepper's new book on the role of the imagination offers such a rethinking, proposing that--contrary to popular rumor--Descartes' entire corpus was centrally concerned with the proper uses of imagination, a concern initially informed by medieval doctrines of the internal senses and imagination. Sepper argue…Read more
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62Rightness and Reasons: Interpretation in Cultural Practices (review)Review of Metaphysics 50 (1): 165-166. 1996.In David Lodge's novel Changing Places, the protagonist Morris Zapp recalls his plan for a series of commentaries examining Jane Austen's novels under every possible rubric, from the historical to the structuralist, the mythical to the Marxist--all in order so to monopolize interpretation as to exhaust it altogether. I take it that Michael Krausz would find Zapp's ambition both unpalatable and impracticable, although he does not actually rule it out of court. Krausz's topic is interpretive ideal…Read more
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212Cartesian prejudice: Gender, education and authority in Poulain de la BarrePhilosophy Compass 13 (12). 2018.The 17th century author François Poulain de la Barre was an important contributor to a pivotal moment in the history of feminist thought. Poulain borrows from many of Descartes’s doctrines, including his dualism, distrust of epistemic authority, accounts of imagination, and passion, and at least some aspects of his doxastic voluntarism; here I examine how he uses a Cartesian notion of prejudice for an anti-essentializing philosophy of women’s education and the formation of the tastes, talents an…Read more
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113Making an Object of Yourself: Hume on the Intentionality of the PassionsIn Jon Miller (ed.), Topics in Early Modern Philosophy of Mind (Springer), Springer Verlag. pp. 223-40. 2008.
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47Responses to Vulnerability: Medicine, Politics and the Body in Descartes and SpinozaIn Stephen Pender & Nancy S. Struever (eds.), Rhetoric and Medicine in Early Modern Europe, Ashgate Publishing. pp. 147-171. 2012.
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18Natural Passions, Reason and Religious Emotion in Hobbes & SpinozaIn Ingolf U. Dalferth & Michael Rodgers (eds.), Passions and Passivity: Claremont Studies in Religion 2009, Mohr Siebeck. pp. 49-68. 2011.
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134Formal Causation and the Explanation of Intentionality in DescartesThe Monist 79 (3): 368-387. 1996.Whatever may be its other sins, the history of philosophy cannot be faulted for the fleetingness of its memory: "modern" philosophy, after all, is supposed to begin with a figure born 400 years ago, René Descartes. Indeed, even the view that it began then can trace its ancestry back to Descartes. But it would be historically naïve simply to agree with Descartes's self-congratulatory myth of creating a new philosophy ex nihilo. His achievement was a tremendous one, rightfully seen as provoking a …Read more
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147About representation; or, how to avoid being caught between animal perception and human languageJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 58 (3): 255-272. 2000.
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138The verificationist in spite of himselfHistory and Theory 42 (3). 2003.Review Essay of Keith Moxey, The Practice of Persuasion: Paradox and Power in Art History
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212Picturing power: Representation and las meninasJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 54 (3): 255-268. 1996.
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190Mind and Sign: Method and the Interpretation of Mathematics in Descartes’s Early WorkCanadian Journal of Philosophy 30 (3): 371-411. 2000.Method may be second only to substance-dualism as the best-known among Descartes's enthusiasms. But knowing that Descartes wants to promote good method is one thing; knowing what exactly he wants to promote is another. Two views seem fairly widespread. The first rests on the claim that Descartes endorses a purely procedural picture of reason, so that right reasoning is a matter of proprieties of operation, rather than respect for its objects. On this view, a method for regulating our reason woul…Read more
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273Descartes's peepshow: Critical Notice of Deborah Brown, Descartes and the Passionate Mind.Canadian Journal of Philosophy 40 (3): 485-508. 2010.Is Descartes the most misunderstood philosopher in the history of philosophy? To many of us in the business of Descartes scholarship, it certainly seems so. Time and time again, we find ourselves faced with pronouncements about one or another of Descartes's 'errors' — whether the shortcomings of the theater model of consciousness, or the pernicious after-effects of a foundationalism devoted to the transparency of the mental, or the shocking vilification of the body and emotions. Typically these …Read more
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Obrazujac wladzę: przedstawienie i Las MeninasIn Andrzej Witko (ed.), Tajemnica Las Meninas, Wydawnictwo Aa. pp. 303-330. 2006.Translation of "Picturing Power: Representation and Las Meninas" (2006).
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17017th and 18th century theories of emotionsStanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2010.1. Introduction: 1.1 Difficulties of Approach; 1.2 Philosophical Background. 2. The Context of Early Modern Theories of the Passions: 2.1 Changing Vocabulary; 2.2 Taxonomies; 2.3 Philosophical Issues in Theories of the Emotions. SUPPLEMENTARY DOCUMENTS: Ancient, Medieval and Renaissance Theories of the Emotions; Descartes; Hobbes; Malebranche; Spinoza; Shaftsbury; Hutcheson; Hume.
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1On the Eternal Truths: a Commentary on Papers by G. Walski, I. Agostini, and L. DevillairsIn G. Belgioiso (ed.), Descartes e i Suoi Avverari: incontri Cartesiani II, Le Monnier Università. pp. 61-70. 2004.
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