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29Plato's Phaedo: A GuideOxford University Press. 2026.This work is about Plato’s dialogue Phaedo and its two central themes: the immortality of the human Soul, and the reality of entities known as Forms. It analyzes in detail the four major arguments of the Phaedo and discusses such topics as: the nature of the Soul; what it is to be something; the morality of suicide; the possibility of reincarnation; the idea that we know something from before we were born; the status of causal laws; and the adequacy conditions for statements involving them. Thro…Read more
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13The Structure of Stoic MetaphysicsIn Brad Inwood (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Volume 46, Oxford University Press. pp. 253-310. 2014.This chapter presents a new interpretation of Stoic ontology. It aims to explain the nature of, and relations between the following: the fundamental items of their physics, bodies; the incorporeal items about which they theorized no less; and universals, towards which the Stoic attitude seems to be a bizarre mixture of realism and anti-realism. The first half of the chapter provides a new model to explain the relationship between the first and second of these items. This model clears up several …Read more
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1279Logic and Music in Plato's PhaedoPhronesis 50 (2): 95-115. 2005.This paper aims to achieve a better understanding of what Socrates means by "συμφωνε[unrepresentable symbol]ν" in the sections of the "Phaedo" in which he uses the word, and how its use contributes both to the articulation of the hypothetical method and the proof of the soul's immortality. Section I sets out the well-known problems for the most obvious readings of the relation, while Sections II and III argue against two remedies for these problems, the first an interpretation of what the συμφων…Read more
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Plato and Aristotle on the UnhypotheticalIn David Sedley (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy XXX: Summer 2006, Oxford University Press. 2006.
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Excavating Dissoi Logoi 4In Brad Inwood (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy XXXV: Winter 2008, Oxford University Press. 2008.
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86A Chrysippean ModalityArchiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 106 (3): 492-517. 2024.In this paper, I attempt to explain one of the most controversial views attributed to the Stoic Chrysippus: that the impossible can follow from the possible. My solution finds in Chrysippus a distinction later made by the medieval logician John Buridan: that between being possible (there being a state of affairs that may occur) and being possibly-true (there being some proposition whose truth-conditions are that state of affairs). Buridan and Chrysippus have radically opposing views on the natur…Read more
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Platonic and Stoic PowersIn Julia Jorati (ed.), Powers: A History, Oxford University Press. 2021.This paper examines Plato's analysis of powers in the Sophist and Republic V, and then turns to their appearance in the second and third categories of Chrysippean Stoicism.
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375The Third Man ArgumentPhilosophy Compass 4 (4): 666-681. 2009.This paper is a brief discussion of the famous ‘Third Man Argument’ as it appears in Plato's dialogue Parmenides. I mention, criticise and refine the most influential analytic approach to the argument; show that the actual conclusion of the argument is different from the one attributed to it by the majority of scholars; and elaborate two responses to the argument, both of which shed interesting light on the Theory of Forms.
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1456Platonic Causes RevisitedJournal of the History of Philosophy 52 (1): 15-32. 2014.This Paper Offers A New Interpretation of Phaedo 96a–103a. Plato has devoted the dialogue up to this point to a series of arguments for the claim that the soul is immortal. However, one of the characters, Cebes, insists that so far nothing more has been established than that the soul is durable, divine, and in existence before the incarnation of birth. What is needed is something more ambitious: a proof that the soul is not such as to pass out of existence. According to Socrates’s initial respon…Read more
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156Descartes on the logical properties of ideasBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 14 (3). 2006.
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1467Plato and Aristotle on The UnhypotheticalOxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 30 101-126. 2006.In the Republic Plato contrasts dialectic with mathematics on the grounds that the former but not the latter gives justifications of some kind for its hypotheses, pursuing this process until it reaches ‘an unhypothetical principle’. But which principles are unhypothetical, and why, is rather dark. One reason for this is the scarcity of forms of that precious word, ‘unhypothetical’ (aνυπoθετος), used only twice by Plato (Rep. 510 b 7, 511 b 6) and just once by Aristotle (Metaph. 1005B14). But tha…Read more
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1517The Structure of Stoic MetaphysicsOxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 46 253-309. 2014.In this paper I offer a new interpretation of Stoic ontology. I aim to explain the nature of, and relations between, (i) the fundamental items of their physics, bodies; (ii) the incorporeal items about which they theorized no less; and (iii) universals, towards which the Stoic attitude seems to be a bizarre mixture of realism and anti-realism. In the first half of the paper I provide a new model to explain the relationship between those items in (i) and (ii). This model clears up several problem…Read more
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1073Megaric MetaphysicsAncient Philosophy 32 (2): 303-321. 2012.I examine two startling claims attributed to some philosophers associated with Megara on the Isthmus of Corinth, namely: Ml. Something possesses a capacity at t if and only if it is exercising that capacity at t. M2. One can speak of a thing only by using its own proper A6yor;. In what follows, I will call the conjunction of Ml and M2 'Megaricism'.1 The lit erature on ancient philosophy contains several valuable discussions of Ml and M2 taken individually.2 But there is no discussion of them to…Read more