•  477
    Aristotle on the unity of general justice and virtue
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. forthcoming.
    Aristotle opens his much‐anticipated treatment of general justice with a focused discussion of whether general justice is the same as virtue. Competing answers to this question have been offered on Aristotle's behalf, and different parts of EN V.1–2 appear to support alternative views. This paper offers an account of the relationship between general justice and virtue—and an explanation of Aristotle's puzzling claim that justice and virtue are “the same but different in being”—by appealing to hi…Read more
  •  94
    Wisdom for the Living: Sophia in Plato's Republic
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 63 (4): 497-521. 2025.
    In proposing an account of wisdom (sophia), Plato was intervening in a longstanding debate about the nature of the highest intellectual virtue for a human being. Despite its historical and philosophical significance, wisdom has received limited scholarly attention. This paper offers an account of wisdom in Plato's Republic. I reject the interpretation that wisdom is identical to knowledge of Forms. Rather, wisdom of the city (or soul) is the ability to make good judgments, by the standard of the…Read more
  •  184
    The cosmological myth in Plato’s Statesman has generated several longstanding scholarly disputes, among them a controversy concerning the number and nature of the cosmic rotation cycles that it depicts. According to the standard interpretation, there are two cycles of rotation: west-to-east rotation occurs during the age of Cronus, and east-to-west rotation occurs during the age of Zeus, which is also our present era. Recent readings have challenged this two-cycle interpretation, arguing that th…Read more