• A Free Will: Origins of the Notion in Ancient Thought
    Filozofia 66 (9): 928-934. 2011.
    The paper deals with free will as discussed in the recent book of Michael Frede A Free Will: Origins of the Notion in Ancient Thought. Besides a close view on the structure of Fredes’s main ideas and arguments, the paper aims to provide a critical discussion of Frede’s view of St. Augustine’s contribution to the development of the notion of free will. This would enable us to explore and re-think the historical and philosophical conditions of the rise of the notion of free will in ancient thought
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    Aristotle’s theory of language in the light of Phys. I.1
    Aither. Journal for the Study of Greek and Latin Philosophical Traditions 10 (20/2018 - International Issue 5): 66-77. 2018.
    The main aim of my paper is to analyse Aristotle’s theory of language in the context of his Physics I.1 and via an analysis and an interpretation of this part of his Physics I try to show that (i) the study of human language (logos) significantly falls within the competence of Aristotle’s physics (i.e. natural philosophy), (ii) we can find the results of such (physical) inquiry in Aristotle’s zoological writings, stated in the forms of the first principles, causes and elements of the human speec…Read more
  •  61
    Priamočiary realizmus a jeho pozícia v rámci sporu realizmu a antirealizmu
    Organon F: Medzinárodný Časopis Pre Analytickú Filozofiu 20 (1): 64-78. 2013.
  •  23
  • The essay deals with the problem of historical incorporation of Greek metaphysics into Christian theology. The approach adopted is inspired by Martin Heidegger’s ideas. Heidegger identified the platform for the incorporation of Greek metaphysics into Christian theology with the understanding of thinking as uncovering of being as being. According to Heidegger, every reductive understanding of thinking has a common source, which is the objectification of thinking. In Western tradition it leads to …Read more
  •  740
    Aristotle’s Theory of Language: A Problem of (Re)Construction
    Cultural History 11 (Supplement): 5-17. 2020.
    The overall purpose of this paper is to contribute to the debate over a possibility to reconstruct such theories which are not explicitly formulated in the preserved texts of ancient authors. Aristotle is one of those who did not write a single treatise on language, though language – both, as an instrument, as well as an object of the study – was still focal point of his philosophy. In his writings, Aristotle rigorously distinguishes several ways of methodologically examining same phenomenon. He…Read more