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1The RepublicIn Gail Fine (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Plato, Oxford University Press. 2008.The Republic happens to be Plato's most important work. The article throws light on Plato's Magnum Opus. The debate rages over the idea of a city; rather an ideal city state comprising three classes—producers, auxiliaries, and guardians. The first to provide for the material needs of the state, the second for its defence, and the third to rule. Each has a specific function of its own, and none is to interfere with the others. Above all, the just city will be unified, ordered, and harmonious. The…Read more
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30Metaphysics and the Defence of Justice in the RepublicProceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 16 1-20. 2000.
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20Socrate prend-il au sérieux le paradoxe de ménon ?Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 181 (4). 1991.
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9Eros, philosophy, and tyrannyIn Myles Burnyeat & Dominic Scott (eds.), Maieusis: essays in ancient philosophy in honour of Myles Burnyeat, Oxford University Press. 2007.
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5Platonic RecollectionIn Gail Fine (ed.), Plato, Volume 1: Metaphysics and Epistemology, Oxford University Press. 1999.
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193Plato's Critique of the Democratic CharacterPhronesis 45 (1): 19-37. 2000.This paper tackles some issues arising from Plato's account of the democratic man in Rep. VIII. One problem is that Plato tends to analyse him in terms of the desires that he fulfils, yet sends out conflicting signals about exactly what kind of desires are at issue. Scholars are divided over whether all of the democrat's desires are appetites. There is, however, strong evidence against seeing him as exclusively appetitive: rather he is someone who satisfies desires from all three parts of his so…Read more
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93Platonic Anamnesis RevisitedClassical Quarterly 37 (2): 346-366. 1987.The belief in innate knowledge has a history almost as long as that of philosophy itself. In our own century it has been propounded in a linguistic context by Chomsky, who sees himself as the heir to a tradition including such philosophers as Descartes, the Cambridge Platonists and Leibniz. But the ancestor of all these is, of course, Plato's theory of recollection or anamnesis. This stands out as unique among all other innatist theses not simply because it was the first, but also because it is …Read more
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29Recollection and ExperiencePhilosophical Review 106 (2): 270. 1995.Who were the true forerunners of the seventeenth-century theorists of innate ideas? Credit should go, not to Plato, despite the common label Platonist, but to the Stoics—or so this challenging new study claims. Plato’s celebrated doctrine of knowledge as recollection differed from these others’ theories not merely in its extravagant postulate of a prenatal knowing state but in many hitherto unrecognized ways, Scott argues. Among those who shared the belief that all men are endowed at birth with …Read more
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68Aristotle On Well-Being And Intellectual Contemplation: Dominic ScottSupplement to the Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 73 (1): 225-242. 1999.
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8Natural Born PhilosophersIn Peter Adamson & Christof Rapp (eds.), State and Nature: Studies in Ancient and Medieval Philosophy, De Gruyter. pp. 35-58. 2021.
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Justice and persuasion in the RepublicIn David Owen Brink, Susan Sauvé Meyer & Christopher John Shields (eds.), Virtue, happiness, knowledge: themes from the work of Gail Fine and Terence Irwin, Oxford University Press. 2018.
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13Aristotle and ThrasymachusIn David Sedley (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy: Volume Xix Winter 2000, Clarendon Press. 2000.
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13Listening to Reason in Plato and AristotleOxford University Press. 2020.Plato and Aristotle used moral philosophy to influence the way people actually live. Focusing on the Republic and the Nicomachean Ethics, this book examines how far they thought it could succeed in this.
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28XIII—From Painters to Poets: Plato’s Methods inRepublicXProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 116 (3): 289-309. 2016.Throughout much of the critique of poetry in Republic X, Socrates exploits a parallel between painting and poetry. I argue there are two distinct methods at work here, the ‘similarity’ and ‘heuristic’ methods. The first uses painting to discover the general definition of mimesis, which is then swiftly applied to poetry. The second describes certain features of painting before using independent arguments to show that these also apply to poetry. That Socrates sometimes uses the parallel in this he…Read more
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5We study the mid- to far-IR properties of a 24?m-selected flux-limited sample of 154 intermediate redshift, infrared luminous galaxies, drawn from the 5 Milli-Jansky Unbiased Spitzer Extragalactic Survey. By combining existing mid-IR spectroscopy and new Herschel SPIRE submm photometry from the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey, we derived robust total infrared luminosity and dust mass estimates and infered the relative contribution of the AGN to the infrared energy budget of the source…Read more
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13Getting down to businessThe Philosophers' Magazine 49 71-74. 2010.Some people have objected that the very idea of philosophy in business is an oxymoron. But why? Does philosophy have to be, by its very nature, other-worldly? If so, how could there be such a thing as political philosophy? Perhaps some would say that philosophers who become involved in business are engaging in a kind of intellectual prostitution. But studying business is different from being paid by business.
Leeds, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics |