•  4
    French and Italian Spinozism
    In Alan D. Schrift (ed.), The History of Continental Philosophy, University of Chicago Press. pp. 2501-2520. 2019.
  •  2
    The Logic of Expression in Deleuze's Expressionism in Philosophy: Spinoza: A Strategy of Engagement
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 12 (1): 47-60. 2004.
    According to the reading of Spinoza that Gilles Deleuze presents in Expressionism in Philosophy: Spinoza, Spinoza's philosophy should not be represented as a moment that can be simply subsumed and sublated within the dialectical progression of the history of philosophy, as it is figured by Hegel in the Science of Logic, but rather should be considered as providing an alternative point of view for the development of a philosophy that overcomes Hegelian idealism. Indeed, Deleuze demonstrates, by m…Read more
  •  16
    Index
    In Sean Bowden & Simon Duffy (eds.), Badiou and Philosophy, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 271-276. 2012.
  •  9
    Bibliography
    In Sean Bowden & Simon Duffy (eds.), Badiou and Philosophy, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 262-270. 2012.
  • Jonathan Wolff
    with Miriam Cohen Christofidis, Roger Crisp, Avner de-Shalit, Ronald Dworkin, Alon Harel, John Harris, W. D. Hart, Dan Hausman, and Richard Hull
    In Kimberley Brownlee & Adam Cureton (eds.), Disability and Disadvantage, Oxford University Press. 2009.
  •  1463
    This article examines the seventeenth-century debate between the Dutch philosopher Benedict de Spinoza and the British scientist Robert Boyle, with a view to explicating what the twentieth-century French philosopher Gilles Deleuze considers to be the difference between science and philosophy. The two main themes that are usually drawn from the correspondence of Boyle and Spinoza, and used to polarize the exchange, are the different views on scientific methodology and on the nature of matter that…Read more
  •  2266
    This thesis sets out an argument in defence of moral objectivism. It takes Mackie as the critic of objectivism and it ends by proposing that the best defence of objectivism may be found in what I shall call Kantian intuitionism, which brings together elements of the intuitionism of Ross and a Kantian epistemology. The argument is fundamentally transcendental in form and it proceeds by first setting out what we intuitively believe, rejecting the sceptical attacks on those beliefs, and by then pro…Read more