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Cathal Woods

Virginia Wesleyan College
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    16
    • Most Recent
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    8

 More details
  • Virginia Wesleyan College
    Department of Philosophy
    Assistant Professor
Ohio State University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2004
Areas of Interest
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy
Social Sciences
Cognitive Sciences
Arts and Humanities
  • All publications (16)
  •  63
    The Last Temptation of the Philosopher-Rulers
    Journal of Ancient Philosophy 3 (1). 2009.
    Ethics
  •  227
    Rationality and the Reflective Mind by Keith E. Stanovich
    Informal Logic 32 (3): 373-380. 2012.
    Informal Logic
  •  221
    Diagramming Objections To Independent Premises
    Informal Logic 31 (2): 139-151. 2011.
    Arguments with what are called "independent" or "convergent" premises are typically diagrammed by using an arrow between each premise and the conclusion. This makes diagramming objections to the reasoning difficult. It also obscures differences in argument structure. I suggest that a single arrow should be used for such arguments and that this is so even in the extreme form of independent premises when the argument is entirely unstructured. I then discuss the diagramming of objections
    Informal Logic
  •  75
    Review Article Scepticism About A Sceptical Aristotle
    Polis 26 (1): 140-149. 2009.
    Aristotle: Logic and Philosophy of LanguageAristotle: EpistemologyAcademic SkepticsPyrrhonists
  •  54
    Aristotle's Many Multitudes And Their Powers
    Journal of Ancient Philosophy 11 (1): 110-143. 2017.
    Politics 3.11 appears to show Aristotle at his most democratic, for in this chapter he defends the right of ordinary people to participate in government and he might even make a multitude of ordinary people authoritative in the polis. Contrary to the dominant interpretation, I argue, however, that this chapter concerns different multitudes at different points and that the first multitude forms a polity and the second is used as a moderating force and does not necessarily form a democracy — Arist…Read more
    Politics 3.11 appears to show Aristotle at his most democratic, for in this chapter he defends the right of ordinary people to participate in government and he might even make a multitude of ordinary people authoritative in the polis. Contrary to the dominant interpretation, I argue, however, that this chapter concerns different multitudes at different points and that the first multitude forms a polity and the second is used as a moderating force and does not necessarily form a democracy — Aristotle's focus here is not on typology but on the argument that power should be shared and not held exclusively by any one group. The article is, in effect, an extended discussion of what Aristotle means, in terms of governance shared by the multitude, by "authoritative".
  •  179
    Euthyphro
    with Ryan Pack
    Complete translation of Plato's Euthyphro.
    ClassicsPlato: EuthyphroClassical Greek Philosophy
  •  44
    Auslegung: a journal of philosophy, Volume 29, Number 2 : Book Reviews (review)
    Review of Susan D. Collins's "Aristotle and the Rediscovery of Citizenship"
  •  119
    Crito
    with Ryan Pack
    Complete translation of Crito by Plato.
    PlatoPlato: Crito
  •  75
    Socrates' defense
    with Ryan Pack
    Complete translation of Socrates' Defense (aka Apology) by Plato.
    Socrates
  • Aristotle and the Rediscovery of Citizenship By Susan D. Collins (review)
    Auslegung 29 (2). 2008.
  •  52
    Commentary on: Marcin Lewiński's "Polylogical fallacies: Are there any?"
    N/A.
    Informal Logic
  •  120
    Socrates of athens: Euthyphro, socrates' defense, crito and the death scene from phaedo
    with Ryan Pack
    Complete translations of Plato's Euthyphro, Socrates' Defense (aka Apology) and Crito, along with the death scene from Phaedo.
    Socrates
  •  75
    As Happy As Can Be: How Republic's Philosophers Fare Best by Ruling
    Journal of Ancient Philosophy 4 (1). 2010.
    Plato: Republic
  •  68
    Death scene from phaedo
    with Ryan Pack
    Translation of the death scene from Phaedo by Plato.
    PlatoSocratesPlato: Phaedo
  •  59
    The language and diagramming of rejection and objection
    Understanding the language of rejections and objections is an important part of the analysis and practice of argument. In order to strengthen this understanding, we might turn to diagramming, as it has been shown to have the virtue of improving critical thinking skills. This paper discusses what reliable meaning can be taken from words and phrases related to rejections and objections, and then how to diagram them.
  •  70
    Aristotle's Politics: Living Well and Living Together, by Eugene Garver
    Mind 123 (489): 210-213. 2014.
    Classical Greek Philosophy
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