•  110
    Comic and Tragic Interlocutors and Socratic Method
    Teaching Philosophy 22 (4): 361-375. 1999.
    Teaching is often framed in terms of performance: an orator stands before a crowd, attempting to capture attention and to deliver material prepared in advance. This analogy falls apart, however, when one considers the extent to which teaching is a dialogical endeavor. Looking to the Meno, the Symposium, and the Republic, this paper offers an interpretation of these texts which deepens our understanding of Plato’s theory of education. First, a Platonic view of education recommends a view of educa…Read more
  •  32
    11 Why We Love Our Phones: A Case Study in the Aesthetics of Gadgets
    In Eva Kit Wah Man & Jeffrey Petts (eds.), Comparative Everyday Aesthetics: Studies in Contemporary Living, Amsterdam University Press. pp. 201-220. 2023.
  •  126
    Game: Animals, Video Games and Humanity
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 81 (1): 117-120. 2023.
    In her provocative 1978 essay, “Eating Meat and Eating People,” (Philosophy Vol. 53, No. 206, pp. 465–479) Cora Diamond asks us to consider Jane Legge’s “Learni.
  •  1514
    Falsely, Sanely, Shallowly
    International Journal of Applied Philosophy 19 (1): 139-156. 2005.
    Our reluctance to demystify grief is a sign of the distinctive obligation and discomfort that people feel towards those who have died. These feelings, however, are instructive about the nature of grief. As a vehicle of a living person’s relation to the dead, grief is mysterious—and we are rightly reluctant to take that mystery away. But grief is not to be avoided by philosophy on that account. I defend a less Romantic view of grief, in which a grieving person’s experience of “normal” grief: 1) i…Read more
  •  4
    Susan L. Feagin and Patrick Maynard, eds., Aesthetics (review)
    Philosophy in Review 19 14-15. 1999.
  • Taste and the Household: The Domestic Aesthetic and Moral Reasoning
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 60 (4): 366-367. 2002.
  •  62
    Shows how lousy food, cheesy clothes, and dingy homes can ruin our lives
  •  95
    The Tears of Things: Melancholy and Physical Objects by schwenger, peter
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 69 (3): 336-338. 2011.