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  1.  51
    Paduan epistemology and the doctrine of the one mind.Harold Skulsky - 1968 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 6 (4):341-361.
  2. On being moved by fiction.Harold Skulsky - 1980 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 39 (1):5-14.
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  3. Metaphorese.Harold Skulsky - 1986 - Noûs 20 (3):351-369.
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  4.  20
    Aristotle's Poetics Revisited.Harold Skulsky - 1958 - Journal of the History of Ideas 19 (2):147.
  5.  30
    Literature and philosophy: The common ground.Harold Skulsky - 1968 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 27 (2):183-197.
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  6. Language Recreated: Seventeenth-Century Metaphorists and the Act of Metaphor.Harold SKULSKY - 1992
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  7.  22
    On the pursuit of signs.Harold Skulsky - 1983 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 41 (3):289-299.
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  8.  15
    Pain, Law, and Conscience in Measure for Measure.Harold Skulsky - 1964 - Journal of the History of Ideas 25 (2):147.
  9.  4
    Spirits Finely Touched: The Testing of Value and Integrity in Four Shakespearean Plays.Harold Skulsky - 1976 - Athens : University of Georgia Press.
    Armed with a fresh analysis of Shakespeare's inherited resources for articulating anxieties rooted in philosophical doubt, Skulsky shows that in four plays—Hamlet, Measure for Measure, King Lear, and Othello—the drama of doubt in search of an exit gives its own kind of urgency to the more familiar Shakespearean drama of action and motive. From Skulsky's study, the four plays emerge as insidiously telling exercises in challenging our working faith in the objectivity of moral choice and the possibility of knowing other (...)
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  10.  17
    Staring Into the Void: Spinoza, Master of Nihilism.Harold Skulsky - 2009 - University of Delaware.
    Drawing extensively on the whole range of Spinoza’s philosophical writing, Staring into the Void devotes twelve chapters to showing in detail how the architecture of reality as Spinoza saw it rises in stages from a theory of being to prophetically modern theories of the physical world, of causal law, of perceptual and intuitive knowledge, of determinism, of the roots of human motivation, and of the kinds of civil society that human nature is capable of sustaining. Professor Skulsky tries to disarm (...)
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