- A brief account of the history of logic, from the The Oxford Companion to Philosophy (edited by Ted Honderich), OUP 1997, 497-500.
- A biography of Peter Abelard, published in the Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 115, edited by Jeremiah Hackett, Detroit: Gale Publishing, 3-15.
- Philosophy in the Latin Christian West, 750-1050, in A Companion to Philosophy in the Middle Ages, edited by Jorge Gracia and Tim Noone, Blackwell 2003, 32-35.
- Ockham wielding his razor!
- Review of The Beatles Anthology, Chronicle Books 2000 (367pp).
- A brief discussion note about Susan James, Passion and Action: The Emotions in Seventeenth-Century Philosophy.
- Review of St. Thomas Aquinas by Ralph McInerny, University of Notre Dame Press 1982 (172pp). From International Philosophical Quarterly23 (1983), 227-229.
- Review of William Heytesbury on Maxima and Minima by John Longeway, D.Reidel 1984 (x+201pp). From The Philosophical Review 96 (1987), 146-149.
- Review of That Most Subtle Question by D. P. Henry, Manchester University Press 1984 (xviii+337pp). From The Philosophical Review 96 (1987), 149-152.
- Review of Introduction to the Problem of Individuation in the Early Middle Ages by Jorge Gracia, Catholic University of America Press 1984 (303pp). From The Philosophical Review 97 (1988), 564-567.
- Review of Introduction to Medieval Logic by Alexander Broadie, OUP 1987 (vi+150pp). From The Philosophical Review 99 (1990), 299-302.
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Human vultures
All men are vultures in that they live off the agonies of the past.
At the foundations of every historical society there are vast
piles of corpses,victims of the murderous acts that,
directly or indirectly,led to the establishment of that society.
There is no getting away from this fact,and there is nothing to be done about it.
It is an inevitable burden of the human condition.
But some men are vultures in a more active sense.
They produce additional piles of corpses by their own action.
And they themselves,or more likely others in their service,
produce the legitimations of the massacres even as the latter
are taking place,and in some instances beforehand.
It is this kind of thinking that is of interest here ;
it constitutes the ideological nexus between policy and pain.
At the foundations of every historical society there are vast
piles of corpses,victims of the murderous acts that,
directly or indirectly,led to the establishment of that society.
There is no getting away from this fact,and there is nothing to be done about it.
It is an inevitable burden of the human condition.
But some men are vultures in a more active sense.
They produce additional piles of corpses by their own action.
And they themselves,or more likely others in their service,
produce the legitimations of the massacres even as the latter
are taking place,and in some instances beforehand.
It is this kind of thinking that is of interest here ;
it constitutes the ideological nexus between policy and pain.
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