-
265Nietzsche and Antiquity: His Reaction and Response to the Classical TraditionBoydell & Brewer. 2004.Wide-ranging essays making up the first major study of Nietzsche and the classical tradition in a quarter of a century. This volume collects a wide-ranging set of essays examining Friedrich Nietzsche's engagement with antiquity in all its aspects. It investigates Nietzsche's reaction and response to the concept of "classicism," with particular reference to his work on Greek culture as a philologist in Basel and later as a philosopher of modernity, and to his reception of German classicism in all…Read more
-
Nietzsche’s Goethe: In Sickness and In HealthPublications of the English Goethe Society 77 113-124. 2013.
-
28Breeding Greeks: Nietzsche, Gobineau, and Classical Theories of RaceIn Paul Bishop, Alan Cardew, Albert Henrichs, Anthony K. Jensen, Barry Stocker, Benjamin Biebuyck, Burkhard Meyer-Sickendiek, Christian Emden, Danny Praet, David F. Horkott, David M. A. Campbell, David N. McNeill, Dirk T. D. Held, Dylan Jaggard, Fiona Jenkins, Friedrich Ulfers, Herman Siemens, Isabelle Vanden Poel, James I. Porter, Jessica N. Berry, John S. Moore, John T. Hamilton, Laurence Lampert, Mark Daniel Cohen, Mark Hammond, Martin A. Ruehl, Neville Morley, Nicholas Martin, Peter Yates, R. Bracht Branham, R. O. Elveton, Simon Gillham, Thomas A. Meyer & Thomas Brobjer (eds.), Nietzsche and Antiquity: His Reaction and Response to the Classical Tradition, Boydell & Brewer. pp. 40-53. 2004.
-
133Conceptions of the good, rivalry, and liberal neutralityCritical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 20 (2): 143-162. 2017.Liberal neutrality is assumed to pertain to rival conceptions of the good. The nature of the rivalry between conceptions of the good is pivotal to the coherence, scope and realisation of liberal neutrality. Yet, liberal theorists have said very little about rivalry. This paper attempts to fill this gap by reviewing three conceptions of rivalry: incompatibility rivalry, intra-domain rivalry and state power rivalry. I argue that state power rivalry is the morally relevant conception of rivalry, an…Read more
-
222Simplicity’s Deficiency: Al-Ghazali’s Defense of the Divine Attributes and Contemporary Trinitarian MetaphysicsTopoi 36 (4): 665-673. 2017.I reconstruct and analyze al-Ghazali’s arguments defending a plurality of real divine attributes in The Incoherence of the Philosophers. I show that one of these arguments can be made to engage with and defend Jeffrey E. Brower and Michael C. Rea’s “Numerical Sameness Without Identity” model of the Trinity. To that end, I provide some background on the metaphysical commitments at play in al-Ghazali’s arguments.
Bellingham, Washington, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy |