• Butchvarov on Existence
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 19 (2): 229-236. 2010.
  •  9
    Richard Cole’s “Knowledgeable Belief”
    Southwest Philosophy Review 18 (2): 111-116. 2002.
  •  37
    Fathering for Freedom
    In Lon Nease & Michael W. Austin (eds.), Fatherhood - Philosophy for Everyone: The Dao of Daddy, Wiley-blackwell. 2011.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Why a Philosophy of Fatherhood? Role Responsibilities Autonomy Autonomy and Fatherhood Conclusion Notes.
  •  1
    Plato's "Sophist" and Contemporary Analytic Ontology
    Dissertation, University of Kansas. 1978.
  •  52
    Macintyre’s Republic
    The Thomist 54 (2): 343-354. 1990.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:MACINTYRE'S REPUBLIC J. K. SWINDLER Westminster College Fulton, Missouri CONTRARY TO HIS own evident intentions and perceptions, in After Virtue A'lasdair Macinty!l.·e is much more of a Ptlatonist 1than the A1 ristotelian he aims to be. I hase this judgment both on the positive evidence that Macintyre and Plato (in the Republic) m1gue for and against the same crucial theses and on the negative evidence that Plato has read answers to …Read more
  •  50
    Weaving: An Analysis of the Constitution of Objects (edited book)
    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 1991.
    In this moderate realist account of the whole range of issues facing contemporary analytic philosophy, J. K. Swindler aims to fill the gap in the literature between extreme realism and extreme nominalism. He discusses such fundamental concepts as existence, property, universality, individual, and necessity; analyzes the paradoxes of negative existentials and the substitutivity of co-referential terms; and defends objectivity in philosophy. The study moves through three phases: first, an argument…Read more
  •  108
    IN THE beginning Parmenides sought to deny the void. But he found himself trapped by his language and his thought into admitting what he sought to deny. Wisely, he counseled others to avoid the whole region in which the problem arises, lest they too be unwarily ensnared. Plato, being less easily intimidated and grasping for the first time the urgency of the paradox, unearthed each snare in turn until he felt he had found a safe path through the forbidden terrain in a new conception of being and …Read more
  •  93
    The Permanent Heartland of Subjectivity
    Idealistic Studies 25 (3): 221-230. 1995.
    One aim of that type of transcendental argument known to us as the cogito is to reveal a self about which there can be no contention, neither about its existence nor its nature. Serious doubts are, of course, perennial over whether there is any such thing as the self, if that is meant to imply that all selves have some essence or structure in common, and whether selves are best understood in terms of their intrinsic nature or external influences. Here is a dialectic that tosses us to and fro bet…Read more
  •  113
    Butchvarov on existence
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 19 (2): 229-236. 1981.
  •  104
    The Formal Distinction
    Southwest Philosophy Review 4 (1): 71-77. 1988.
  •  71
    Ontology and the Practical Arena (review)
    Southwest Philosophy Review 6 (2): 125-130. 1990.
  •  24
    Constructivist Moral Realism
    The Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 42 147-153. 1998.
    We are social animals in the sense that we spontaneously invent and continuously re-invent the social realm. But, not unlike other artifacts, once real, social relations, practices, institutions, etc., obey prior laws, some of which are moral laws. Hence, with regard to social reality, we ought to be ontological constructivists and moral realists. This is the view sketched here, taking as points of departure Searle's recent work on social ontology and May's on group morality. Moral and social se…Read more
  •  101
    Knowledgeable Belief
    Southwest Philosophy Review 18 (1): 89-94. 2002.
  •  78
  •  100
    Constructivist Moral Realism
    Southwest Philosophy Review 14 (1): 1-24. 1998.
  •  82
    Falling in Love with Wisdom (review)
    Southwest Philosophy Review 9 (2): 148-150. 1993.
  •  103
    In The Ant Trap, Brian Epstein proposes a bold new systematic strategy for developing social ontology. He explores the history and current state of the art and provides pointed critiques of leading theories in the field. His framework, incompassing frames that provide principles for grounding social facts, is developed in some detail across a variety of social practices and applied to revealing real world as well as hyporthetical examples. If Epstein's account holds, it should provide new direct…Read more
  •  44
    Simplicity: A Meta-Metaphysics by Craig Dilworth (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 68 (3): 649-651. 2015.
  •  58
  •  90
    Piper on Respect for Personal Autonomy and Prudential Value
    Southwest Philosophy Review 25 (2): 63-67. 2009.
  •  61
    Autonomy and Accountability
    Southwest Philosophy Review 26 (1): 215-223. 2010.
  •  74
    Kenehan on Rawls on Climate Change
    Southwest Philosophy Review 23 (2): 9-12. 2007.
  •  63
    Riker on Rawls' Theory of Legitimacy
    Southwest Philosophy Review 22 (2): 123-126. 2006.
  •  40
    Induction, Probability and Skepticism
    Review of Metaphysics 46 (2): 394-395. 1992.
    Pyrrho of Elis followed Alexander into the Indus Valley where he contracted the skepticism which has ever since goaded Western thought. In this masterful study of the limits of human knowledge, D. P. Chattopadhyaya, one of India's brightest philosophical lights, revitalizes the westward flow of skepticism by putting our major epistemologies and philosophies of science to the test of his "anthropological rationalism". Often echoing Western pragmatists as well as Indians like Nägärjuna and Samkara…Read more
  •  80
    The Problem of Universals (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 17 (3): 279-281. 1994.