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17Matthew W. Knotts, On Interrogation, Introspection, Dialectic and the Ineluctable Polarity of Being and KnowingAugustinian Studies 56 (2): 383-386. 2025.
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35Other Minds and Unknown Women: The Case of GaslightIn Garry L. Hagberg (ed.), Stanley Cavell on Aesthetic Understanding, Springer Verlag. pp. 37-55. 2018.Stanley Cavell’s approach to film is distinguished by his insistence on a deep connection between the recurring preoccupations of certain classical Hollywood genres, on the one hand, and the philosophical problem of other minds skepticism, on the other. In his groundbreaking 1981 book Pursuits of Happiness, Cavell argued that a series of films he dubbed “comedies of remarriage” represent profound and original sources of thought about the conditions in which one can come to know the subjectivity …Read more
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96Aristotle on the Voluntary in Other AnimalsPhilosophie Antique 24 (24): 65-89. 2024.Dans ses écrits biologiques et éthiques, Aristote affirme explicitement que les animaux non humains sont capables d’action volontaire. Mais d’autres aspects de son traitement du volontaire dans ces mêmes écrits semblent contredire cette affirmation et impliquer que le volontaire nécessite une faculté rationnelle spécifiquement humaine. Les lecteurs d’Aristote ont proposé diverses solutions à ce problème. Un premier groupe dit qu’Aristote définit le volontaire uniquement en termes de capacités qu…Read more
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57Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics Book X. Translation and Commentary. By Joachim AufderheideAncient Philosophy 44 (2): 542-545. 2024.
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86Colloquium 3 Aristotle on the Voluntariness of ViceProceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 36 (1): 65-88. 2021.In Nicomachean Ethics III.5, Aristotle argues that virtue and vice are “up to us and voluntary.” Readers have long struggled to make sense of Aristotle’s arguments in this chapter and to explain how they cohere with the rest of his ethical project. Among the most influential lines of complaint is that the argument of III.5 appears to contradict his emphasis elsewhere on the power of upbringing to shape character, beginning in childhood. Scholars have developed two main interpretive approaches to…Read more
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131Arete in Plato and Aristotle (edited book)Parnassos Press. 2022.For Plato and Aristotle, arete (traditionally translated as "virtue") was the essential object of human admiration and striving, and even the key to happiness. Their work continues to inspire reflection on fundamental questions of ethics and politics today, as the fourteen new essays collected here demonstrate. Contributors: Lidia Palumbo, Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides, Ryan M. Brown, Jay R. Elliott, Guilherme Domingues da Motta, Federico Casella, Jonathan A. Buttaci, George Harvey, Mark Ralkowski, G…Read more
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139Aristotle on the Archai of Practical ThoughtSouthern Journal of Philosophy 56 (4): 448-468. 2018.Scholars have long debated how exactly Aristotle thinks that agents acquire the distinctivearchai(“principles” or “starting‐points”) that govern their practical reasoning. The debate has traditionally been dominated by anti‐intellectualists, who hold that for Aristotle all agents acquire theirarchaisolely through a process of habituation in the nonrational soul. Their traditional opponents, the intellectualists, focus their argument on the case of the virtuous person, arguing that in Aristotle’s…Read more
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140Virtue Ethics and Literary ImaginationPhilosophy and Literature 42 (1): 244-256. 2018.Did Plato see something that Aristotle missed? According to a familiar narrative, Plato regarded literature as dangerous to the aims of philosophy, and he accordingly exiled the poets from his ideal republic. By contrast, Aristotle is supposed to have reconciled literature and philosophy, not only through his appreciative account of epic and tragedy in the Poetics but also through his invocations of literary examples at crucial junctures elsewhere in his corpus, for example his use of the Trojan…Read more
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75Craig G. Bartholomew and Michael W. Goheen, Christian Philosophy: A Systematic and Narrative Introduction (review)Augustinian Studies 49 (1): 96-98. 2018.
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204Stag Hunts and Committee Work: Cooperation and the Mutualistic ParadigmReview of Philosophy and Psychology 2 (2): 245-260. 2011.Contemporary philosophers and psychologists seek the roots of ethically sound forms of behavior, including altruism and a sense of fairness, in the basic structure of cooperative action. I argue that recent work on cooperation in both philosophy and psychology has been hampered by what I call “the mutualistic paradigm.” The mutualistic paradigm treats one kind of cooperative situation—what I call a “mutualistic situation”—as paradigmatic of cooperation in general. In mutualistic situations, such…Read more
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72On the Teacher: Saint Augustine and Saint Thomas Aquinas: A Comparison. By William Ligon Wade, S. J., edited by John P. Doyle (review)Augustinian Studies 45 (1): 123-125. 2014.
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171Reply to Müller: Aristotle on vicious choiceBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 24 (6): 1193-1203. 2016.
Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Normative Ethics |
| Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy |