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  1.  56
    Platonic Causes Revisited.D. T. J. Bailey - 2014 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 52 (1):15-32.
    This Paper Offers A New Interpretation of Phaedo 96a–103a. Plato has devoted the dialogue up to this point to a series of arguments for the claim that the soul is immortal. However, one of the characters, Cebes, insists that so far nothing more has been established than that the soul is durable, divine, and in existence before the incarnation of birth. What is needed is something more ambitious: a proof that the soul is not such as to pass out of (...)
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  2. The Structure of Stoic Metaphysics.D. T. J. Bailey - 2014 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 46:253–309.
  3. Plato and Aristotle on the Unhypothetical.D. T. J. Bailey - 2006 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 30:101.
  4.  15
    A Chrysippean Modality.D. T. J. Bailey - forthcoming - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie.
    In this paper, I attempt to explain one of the most controversial views attributed to the Stoic Chrysippus: that the impossible can follow from the possible. My solution finds in Chrysippus a distinction later made by the medieval logician John Buridan: that between being possible (there being a state of affairs that may occur) and being possibly-true (there being some proposition whose truth-conditions are that state of affairs). Buridan and Chrysippus have radically opposing views on the nature of propositions. What (...)
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  5. Plato and Aristotle on the Unhypothetical.D. T. J. Bailey - 2006 - In David Sedley (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy Xxx: Summer 2006. Oxford University Press.
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  6. The Third Man Argument.D. T. J. Bailey - 2009 - Philosophy Compass 4 (4):666-681.
    This paper is a brief discussion of the famous 'Third Man Argument' as it appears in Plato's dialogue Parmenides . I mention, criticise and refine the most influential analytic approach to the argument; show that the actual conclusion of the argument is different from the one attributed to it by the majority of scholars; and elaborate two responses to the argument, both of which shed interesting light on the Theory of Forms.
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  7. Excavating Dissoi logoi 4.D. T. J. Bailey - 2008 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 35:249-264.
  8.  68
    Descartes on the logical properties of ideas.D. T. J. Bailey - 2006 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 14 (3):401 – 411.
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  9. Excavating Dissoi Logoi 4.D. T. J. Bailey - 2008 - In Brad Inwood (ed.), Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy Xxxv: Winter 2008. Oxford University Press.
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  10. Review: Epistemology After Protagoras: Responses to Relativism in Plato, Aristotle and Democritus. [REVIEW]D. T. J. Bailey - 2006 - Mind 115 (460):1151-1153.