•  54
    Communities of Transmission: The Texts of Aristotle from Antiquity to the Renaissance
    Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 80 (1-2): 637-682. 2024.
    Only through a long series of accidents do we have “The Works of Aristotle” at all—the Corpus Aristotelicum. When Aristotle died in 322 B.C., he is said to have left behind a body of 156 “published” works (“exoteric,” namely, available for public consumption). They survive only in fragments, too short and too few to give much sense of them. That his esoteric works, the Corpus Aristotelicum, have survived at all has been called “miraculous.” This paper traces how those esoteric works of Aristotle…Read more
  •  45
    Eros and the Intoxications of Enlightenment (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 64 (3): 625-627. 2011.
  •  20
    Widder, Nathan., Political Theory after Deleuze (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 67 (3): 672-674. 2014.
  •  21
    Verene, Donald Phillip. Moral Philosophy and the Modern World (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 68 (2): 448-450. 2014.
  •  18
    Vico's "New Science": A Philosophical Commentary (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 70 (4). 2017.
  •  22
    Metaphysics and the Modern World (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 72 (1). 2018.
  •  18
    Athens, Arden, Jerusalem: Essays in Honor of Mera Flaumenhaft (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 72 (2). 2018.
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  •  30
    Mystery & intelligibility: history of philosophy as pursuit of wisdom (edited book)
    The Catholic University of America Press. 2021.
    Contributors consider the limits of our knowledge of a world of unlimited knowability by examining philosophical thought from the Classical Greeks to the present.
  •  47
    The Rhetorical Sense of Philosophy by Donald Phillip Verene
    Review of Metaphysics 76 (2): 369-370. 2022.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Rhetorical Sense of Philosophy by Donald Phillip VereneJeffrey Dirk WilsonVERENE, Donald Phillip. The Rhetorical Sense of Philosophy. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2021. xiii + 139 pp. Cloth, $49.95Rhetoric gives philosophy the ability to speak. Philosophy gives rhetoric something to say. They are mutually indispensable, and their rivalry at times descends into enmity. There are also occasions when only the …Read more
  •  41
    The Philosophy of Literature: Four Studies by Donald Phillip Verene
    Review of Metaphysics 73 (2): 384-386. 2019.
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    Metaphysics and the Modern World by Donald Phillip Verene
    Review of Metaphysics 72 (1): 157-158. 2018.
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  •  74
    A Consideration of Roland Barthes’s The Pleasure of the Text
    International Philosophical Quarterly 56 (4): 469-486. 2016.
    Richard Howard calls Roland Barthes’s The Pleasure of the Text the first “erotics of reading” in which we, as readers, “instance our ecstasy, our bliss in the text.” Yet Barthes writes as if his erotic reading of texts were an analogue to some other relationship, perhaps to an unnamed, even unwritten text. Thus his is a transcendent eroticism in which the encounter with the text points beyond the text. As alternative to an erotics of reading, this paper proposes an agapics of reading, also calle…Read more
  •  55
    Aristotle asserts that philosophy, which begins in wonder, seeks principles and causes in the world, just as mythology does, but each in a different way. This article argues that Homer analyzes the world according to Vico’s imaginative genera; early Greek philosophy according to natural genera, and philosophers in the strict sense according to rational genera. Thus, Homer’s rainbow is the goddess Iris, which Xenophanes divides into natural object and divinity, and which Aristotle calls principle…Read more
  •  1841
    St. Thomas’s Third Way to prove the existence of God, “Of Possibility and Necessity” (ST 1, q.2, art. 3, response) is one of the most controverted passages in the entire Thomistic corpus. The central point of dispute is that if there were only possible beings, each at some time would cease to exist and, therefore, at some point in time nothing would exist, and because something cannot come from nothing, in such an eventuality, nothing would exist now—a reductio ad absurdum conclusion. Therefore,…Read more
  • Vico's Metaphysics of Poetic Wisdom
    Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 41 (2): 339-358. 2012.