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10The Politics of Socratic Humor. By John Lombardini (review)Ancient Philosophy 40 (1): 209-211. 2020.
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13Plato’s Symposium: A Critical Guide by Pierre Destrée, Zina GiannopoulouJournal of the History of Philosophy 57 (1): 159-160. 2019.Plato’s Symposium offers an enticing range of topics for the critical-guide treatment of philosophical classics now in vogue. The current volume contains thirteen essays of consistently high quality devoted to such issues as the nature of erotic desire and its orientation toward the forms, the ethical question of how best to live in the pursuit of wisdom, Plato’s engagement with poetry, and his use of dramatic interaction between speakers to advance his philosophical agenda.An admirable feature …Read more
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8The Teleology of Action in Plato's RepublicOxford University Press. 2017.This book explores a variety of teleology present in Plato's Republic, in which actions are carried out for the sake of an end that is not the intended goal. Payne draws on examples from Republic to demonstrate that performing some actions can help produce unintended results, which qualify as ends or purposes of human action.
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Eros and Practical Reason in the "Symposium"Dissertation, University of Notre Dame. 1998.This dissertation presents Plato's distinctive approach in the Symposium to topics normally associated with Aristotelian ethics: practical reason, friendship, the theoretic life, and the ranking of the lives associated with political activity and philosophy. After an introductory chapter I focus on Diotima's speech in chapters 2 through 6. Eros appears as a species of desire, one that lacks its object, is self-interested, and can generate action. In addition to these basic characteristics common…Read more
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33The Rhetoric of Plato’s Republic: Democracy and the Philosophical Problem of PersuasionAncient Philosophy 37 (2): 446-448. 2017.
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12Virtue and Reason in Plato and Aristotle, by A.W. PriceAncient Philosophy 33 (2): 443-446. 2013.
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180The Division of Goods and Praising Justice for Itself in Republic IIPhronesis 56 (1): 58-78. 2011.In Republic II Glaucon assigns to Socrates the task of praising justice for itself. What it means to praise justice for itself is unclear. A new interpretation is offered on the basis of an analysis of Glaucon's division of goods. A distinction is developed between criterial benefits, those valuable consequences of a thing which provide a standard for evaluating a thing as a good instance of its type, and fringe benefits, valuable consequences which do not provide such a standard. Socrates is ex…Read more
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Areas of Interest
Meta-Ethics |
Normative Ethics |
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy |