• Deliberation as Inquiry: Aristotle's Alternative to the Presumption of Open Alternatives
    Karen Margrethe Nielsen
    Philosophical Review 120 (3): 383-421. 2011.
    This article examines Aristotle's model of deliberation as inquiry (zêtêsis), arguing that Aristotle does not treat the presumption of open alternatives as a precondition for rational deliberation. Deliberation aims to uncover acts that are up to us and conducive to our ends; it essentially consists in causal mapping. Unlike the comparative model presupposed in the literature on deliberation, Aristotle's model can account for the virtuous agent's deliberation, as well as deliberation with a view…Read more
  • This paper explores the structural mismatch problem between physical and phenomenal properties, where the similarity relations we experience among phenomenal properties lack corresponding relations in the physical domain. I introduce a new understanding of this problem via the Uniformity Principle: for any set of dimensions used to determine phenomenal similarities, there must be a consistently applied set of physical dimensions generating the same pattern of similarity relations. I then assess …Read more
  • I confess: I am a Buddhist-Platonist.
  • Plato’s Politics of Ignorance
    In Verity Harte & Melissa Lane (eds.), Politeia in Greek and Roman Philosophy, Cambridge University Press. pp. 139-154. 2013.