•  45
    Melissus on the Painlessness of What-Is
    Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 30 (1): 127-141. 2025.
    Commonly regarded as a prominent representative of Eleaticism, Melissus is perhaps best known for advancing starkly counterintuitive claims against plurality, change, and the reliability of the senses. This paper examines another unexpected, though seldom noticed, aspect of Melissus’ argument for Eleatic monism: his argument for what-is’ absolute immunity from pain in DK 30 B 7. Contrary to interpretations dismissing Melissus’ argument as metaphorical or crude, I argue that the argument of B 7 i…Read more
  •  1
    Is the Soul a Form? The Status of the Soul in the Final Argument of the Phaedo, Again
    In Sara Ahbel-Rappe, Danielle A. Layne & Crystal Addey (eds.), Soul Matters: Plato and Platonists on the Nature of the Soul, Society For Biblical Literature. pp. 123-148. 2023.
  •  141
    We have it on the authority of Aristotle that “reason (nous) is the best thing in us” (EN X.7, 1177a20). This idealization of reason permeates his account of eudaimonia, a term commonly translated as ‘happiness’, which Aristotle identifies with living and doing well (EN I.4, 1095a18-20). In harmony with a certain intellectualism peculiar to the mainstream of ancient philosophical accounts of eudaimonia, Aristotle holds that living well requires the unique practical application of rationality of …Read more
  •  63
    At Plato’s insistence to become as godlike as one can, the Neoplatonists seek their salvation in union with the first principle they call the One, identifying this union as the highest end of philosophy. As with all aspirations, the transition from theoretical ideal to practical implementation remains a perennial problem: how is it possible for a person, as a mere mortal, to leave the person’s confined ontological station to unite with the divine, transcendent first principle? This paper is an a…Read more