• York University
    Department of Philosophy
    Other faculty (Postdoc, Visiting, etc)
University of Pittsburgh
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1992
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Interest
Meta-Ethics
Normative Ethics
  •  28
    This essay takes issue with a common interpretation of Book II of Plato’s Republic as anticipating the modern theory of division of labour, first promoted by Adam Smith. It is argued that, far from anticipating Adam Smith, Plato developed original reflections which, though naturally shaped by the economic reality of his time, reveal a concern for fundamental issues of economic thought: the value of labour, the nature of economic interdependence in a political association, the relation between ec…Read more
  • Ever since Aristotle, tradition has it that Plato postulated a static world--different and separate from the physical world--to be the proper object of knowledge, on the grounds that objects in the physical world are unstable. But why should the proper object of knowledge be unchanging? The answer depends on Plato's view of what it is to have knowledge rather than his view of what knowledge is: to have knowledge entails being immoveable by persuasion. ;The roots of this view are found in Plato's…Read more
  •  9
    This essay takes issue with a common interpretation of Book II of Plato's Republic as anticipating the modern theory of division of labour, first promoted by Adam Smith. It is argued that, far from anticipating Adam Smith, Plato developed original reflections which, though naturally shaped by the economic reality of his time, reveal a concern for fundamental issues of economic thought: the value of labour, the nature of economic interdependence in a political association, the relation between ec…Read more
  •  29
    'Having one's own' and distributive justice in Plato's Republic
    History of Political Thought 32 (2): 185-214. 2011.
    Although Plato did not explicitly propose any principle of distributive justice, he indicated that justice involves both the doing and the having of one's own. On the interpretation I am proposing: (i) 'having one's own' refers directly to the compensation one receives for doing one's own; (ii) the principle of distribution of benefits that is actually operative in Plato's system is that any form of compensation must be such that the worker (whether ruler, soldier or producer) has his needs sati…Read more