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  1.  39
    An Alternative Reading of De Anima 413a8–9.Mary Elizabeth Tetzlaff - 2013 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 87:115-125.
    This paper presents three interpretations of the infamous “sailor / ship” sentence that concludes Aristotle’s De Anima II.1. The first two interpretations represent the ones most popular in contemporary scholarship; the final is the author’s original. The interpretations are then evaluated with respect to grammatical plausibility and explanatory strength. The paper makes a case that the new reading answers to both points of evaluation and contributes to an interpretive approach to Aristotle that values the coherence and cogency of his De (...)
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  2.  33
    The Peculiar Virtues of the Rulers and the Ruled in Politics III.4.Mary Elizabeth Tetzlaff - 2014 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 88:155-163.
    At the end of Book III, chapter 4 of Aristotle’s Politics, Aristotle identifies the virtue peculiar to the excellent ruler as prudence. The ruled’s complementary virtue is true opinion. All the other virtues are held in common, albeit in different forms. Why these habits? The answer to this question lies in Aristotle’s discussion of the good man and the serious citizen in III.4, and of the rule of law in III.16.
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