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Anthony W. Price [15]Anthony Price [9]
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Anthony Price
Birkbeck College
  1.  48
    Love and Friendship in Plato and Aristotle.Anthony Price - 1990 - Mind 99 (395):487-489.
    Book synopsis: Reissued in 1997 with corrections and a new Afterword, this book fully explores for the first time an idea common to Plato and Aristotle, which unites their treatments - otherwise very different - of love and friendship. The idea is that although persons are separate, their lives need not be. One person's life may overflow into another's, and as such, helping another person is a way of serving oneself. The author shows how their view of love and friendship, (...)
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  2.  91
    Emotions in Plato and Aristotle.Anthony Price - 2009 - In Peter Goldie (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Emotion. Oxford University Press.
    Without separating off emotions as such, Plato and Aristotle alert us to their compositional intricacy, which involves body and mind, cognition and desire, perception and feeling. Even the differences of interpretation to which scholars are resigned focus our minds upon the complexity of the phenomena, and their resistance to over-unitary definitions. Emotions, after all, are things that we feel; at the same time, emotionally is how we often think. Discarding too simple a Socratic focus upon contents of thought, Plato and (...)
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  3. Are Plato’s Soul-Parts Psychological Subjects?Anthony W. Price - 2009 - Ancient Philosophy 29 (1):1-15.
    It is well-known that Plato’s Republic introduces a tripartition of the incarnate human soul; yet quite how to interpret his ‘parts’ 1 is debated. On a strong reading, they are psychological subjects – much as we take ourselves to be, but homunculi, not homines. On a weak reading, they are something less paradoxical: aspects of ourselves, identified by characteristic mental states, dispositional and occurrent, that tend to come into conflict. Christopher Bobonich supports the strong reading in his Plato’s Utopia Recast: (...)
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  4.  79
    Varieties of pleasure in Plato and Aristotle.Anthony Price - 2017 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 52:177-208.
  5. Aristotle on the ends of deliberation.Anthony Price - 2011 - In Michael Pakaluk & Giles Pearson (eds.), Moral Psychology and Human Action in Aristotle. Oxford University Press.
     
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  6.  24
    IX-Against Requirements of Rationality.Anthony W. Price - 2008 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 108 (1part2):157-176.
    Are inferences, theoretical and practical, subject to requirements of rationality? If so, are these of the form 'if … ought …' or 'ought … if …'? If the latter, how are we to understand the 'if'? It seems that, in all cases, we get unintuitive implications if 'ought' connotes having reason. It is difficult to formulate such requirements, and obscure what they explain. There might also be a requirement forbidding self-contradiction. It is a good question whether self-contradiction constitutes, or evidences, (...)
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  7.  13
    Richard Mervyn Hare.Anthony W. Price - unknown
    A long encyclopedia entry, sketching his life, analysing his work.
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  8. Against requirements of rationality.Anthony W. Price - 2008 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 108 (1pt2):157-176.
    Are inferences, theoretical and practical, subject to requirements of rationality? If so, are these of the form 'if … ought …' or 'ought … if …'? If the latter, how are we to understand the 'if'? It seems that, in all cases, we get unintuitive implications if 'ought' connotes having reason. It is difficult to formulate such requirements, and obscure what they explain. There might also be a requirement forbidding self-contradiction. It is a good question whether self-contradiction constitutes, or evidences, (...)
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  9. The practical syllogism in Aristotle: a new interpretation.Anthony W. Price - 2008 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 11:151-162.
    Does Aristotle by his phrase “syllogisms of things to be done” mean syllogisms of a distinctive and inherently practical content, perhaps syllogisms subject to an unfamiliar logic? Or does he just mean syllogisms that are relevant in contexts concerning what to do next? I propose the second interpretation, taking the syllogisms in question to constitute the deductive kernel of stretches of practical thinking. They are pieces of deduction that take on a practical function in context.
     
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  10.  15
    Aristotle on Virtue.Anthony Price - 2013 - In Julia Peters (ed.), Aristotelian Ethics in Contemporary Perspective. Routledge. pp. 27.
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  11.  18
    Introduction: The Promise of Apathy.Jeffrey M. Perl, Anthony W. Price, John McDowell, Matthew A. Taylor, Caleb Thompson & Douglas Mao - 2009 - Common Knowledge 15 (3):340-347.
    This essay is the journal editor's introduction to part 3 of an ongoing symposium on quietism. With reference to writings of James Joyce, Francis Picabia, J. M. Coetzee, Charles Taylor, Alasdair MacIntyre, Elaine Pagels, and Karen King—and with extended reference to Jonathan Lear's study of “cultural devastation,” Radical Hope—Jeffrey Perl explores the possibility that the fear of anomie is misplaced. He argues that, in comparison with the violence and narrowness of any given social order, anomie may well be preferable, and, (...)
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  12.  53
    Aristotle on Desire, Its Objects, and Varieties.Anthony W. Price - 2014 - Polis 31 (1):160-167.
    I discuss various crucial points, most notably the relation between desire and the good.
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  13.  28
    Aristotle on virtue: a response to Thomas Hurka.Anthony W. Price - 2012 - In .
    I defend Aristotle's account of the motivations of the virtuous agent from criticisms made by Thomas Hurka.
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  14. 1. A puzzling sentence.Anthony Price - 2011 - In Michael Pakaluk & Giles Pearson (eds.), Moral Psychology and Human Action in Aristotle. Oxford University Press. pp. 135.
     
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  15.  73
    Eudaimonism and egocentricity in Aristotle.Anthony W. Price - 2013 - The Harvard Review of Philosophy.
    The paper reiterates the account of Aristotle's conception of eudaimonia to be found in my monograph Virtue and Reason in Plato and Aristotle, and then faces the charge that it makes the agent's motivation unattractively egocentric (viz. on his own eudaimonia).
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  16. Eudaimonia and Theôria within the Nicomachean Ethics.Anthony W. Price - 2014 - In Pierre Destrée & Marco Antônio Zingano (eds.), Theoria: Studies on the Status and Meaning of Contemplation in Aristotle's Ethics. Louvain-La-Neuve: Peeters Press.
     
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  17.  6
    11. Friendship (VIII und IX).Anthony W. Price - 2006 - In Otfried Höffe (ed.), Aristoteles: Nikomachische Ethik. Boston: Akademie Verlag. pp. 229-251.
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  18.  23
    Generating in beauty for the sake of immortality: personal love and the goals of the lover.Anthony W. Price - 2017 - In .
    This paper discusses two debated questions about how best to interpret the contribution to the Symposium that Socrates pretends to derive from Diotima: Within the Lesser Mysteries, is the erōs that is being defined and characterized, with appeal to the notion of “generation in beauty”, a generic erōs that is equivalent to Socratic desire in general, or a specific erōs that is erotic in our sense? Within the Greater Mysteries, is interpersonal erōs maintained, or supplanted? I find that neither answer (...)
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  19. Projectivism.Anthony W. Price - 2013 - In Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics. Hoboken, NJ: Blackwell.
     
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  20. The Practical Syllogism in Aristotle. A New Interpretation.Anthony Price - 2009 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 12.
    Does Aristotle by his phrase “syllogisms of things to be done” mean syllogisms of a distinctive and inherently practical content, perhaps syllogisms subject to an unfamiliar logic? Or does he just mean syllogisms that are relevant in contexts concerning what to do next? I propose the second interpretation, taking the syllogisms in question to constitute the deductive kernel of stretches of practical thinking. They are pieces of deduction that take on a practical function in context.
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  21.  27
    The Practical Syllogism in Aristotle: A New Interpretation.Anthony W. Price - 2008 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 11 (1):151-162.
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  22.  29
    Book Review - Backsliding: Understanding Weakness of Will, by Alfred R. Mele. [REVIEW]Anthony W. Price - unknown
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  23.  7
    Ethical Formation. [REVIEW]Anthony Price - 2004 - Philosophy 79 (4):624-628.
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  24.  22
    Ethical formation by Sabina Lovibond. Cambridge, mass.: Harvard university press, 2002. Pp. XV+203. ??12.95, $24.95 and $49.95. [REVIEW]Anthony Price - 2004 - Philosophy 79 (4):624-628.
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