•  5
    Om menneskets natur
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 56 (4): 191-196. 2021.
  •  286
    Complete Life in the Eudemian Ethics
    Apeiron: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy and Science 53 (2). 2023.
    In the Eudemian Ethics II 1, 1219a34–b8, Aristotle defines happiness as ‘the activity of a complete life in accordance with complete virtue’. Most scholars interpret a complete life as a whole lifetime, which means that happiness involves virtuous activity over an entire life. This article argues against this common reading by using Aristotle’s notion of ‘activity’ (energeia) as a touchstone. It argues that happiness, according to the Eudemian Ethics, must be a complete activity that reaches its…Read more
  •  1252
    The Beauty of Failure: Hamartia in Aristotle's Poetics
    Classical Quarterly 71 (2): 582-600. 2021.
    In Poetics 13, Aristotle claims that the protagonist in the most beautiful tragedies comes to ruin through some kind of ‘failure’—in Greek, hamartia. There has been notorious disagreement among scholars about the moral responsibility involved in hamartia. This article defends the old reading of hamartia as a character flaw, but with an important modification: rather than explaining the hero's weakness as general weakness of will (akrasia), it argues that the tragic hero is blinded by temper (thu…Read more
  •  131
    Greske tragedier for vår tid (review)
    Agora 38 (1-2): 489-497. 2020.
  •  8
    Plato and the Invention of Life, written by Michael Naas (review)
    International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 13 (2): 197-199. 2019.
  •  270
    Seier gjennom nederlag
    Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 52 (4): 146-159. 2017.
    This paper is a revised version of the essay that won the Zapffe Prize in 2017. In «The Last Messiah» and On the tragic, Peter Wessel Zapffe suggests that humankind should cease to reproduce, as the meaning of life cannot be found and human life at its best is tragic. The theory has been criticized for assuming that the meaning of life must be explained by an external cause and implicitly asks for an infinite causal chain. In this paper, I argue that it is possible to escape this critique by add…Read more