• Source: Richard Kraut
    • Richard Kraut is the Emeritus Charles and Emma Morrison Professor in the Humanities at Northwestern University and a specialist in ancient Greek philosophy.


      Education and career


      Richard Kraut got his M.S. from the University of Michigan, and his Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1969 under the supervision of Gregory Vlastos. He joined the philosophy department at the University of Illinois, Chicago in 1969, and taught there until 1995, when he moved to Northwestern University.


      Bibliography




      = Books

      =
      Socrates and the State (Princeton UP: 1984).
      Aristotle on the Human Good (Princeton UP: 1989).
      Aristotle Politics Books VII and VIII, traduction avec commentaires (Clarendon: 1997).
      Aristotle: Political Philosophy (Oxford UP: 2002)
      What is Good and Why: The Ethics of Well-Being (Harvard UP: 2007).
      How to Read Plato (Granta Books : 2008).
      Against Absolute Goodness (Oxford University Press: 2011).


      = Editor

      =
      The Cambridge Companion to Plato (Cambridge, 1992).
      Plato's Republic: Critical Essays (Rowman & Littlefield, 1997).
      Aristotle's Politics: Critical Essays (with Steven Skultety, Rowman & Littlefield, 2005)
      The Blackwell Guide to Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics (2006)


      = Articles

      =
      Two Conceptions of Happiness, The Philosophical Review 88 (1979), p. 167-197. (Reprinted in Louis Pojman, ed., Ethical Theory: Classical and Contemporary Readings, Wadsworth Publishing Co., 1989; also in William H. Shaw, ed., Social and Personal Ethics, Wadsworth Publishing Co., 1993, and in T.I. Irwin, ed., Articles on Greek and Roman Philosophy, Garland Publishing Inc.
      The Defense of Justice in Plato's Republic, in R. Kraut (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Plato, Cambridge University Press, 1992, p. 311-337.
      Return to the Cave: Republic 519-521, In Oxford Readings in Philosophy: Plato: Ethics, Politics, Religion, and the Soul, ed. by Gail Fine, Oxford University Press, 1999
      Doing Without Morality: Reflections on the Meaning of Dein in Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics, Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, mai 2006, p. 169-200.
      How to Justify Ethical Propositions, in Richard Kraut (ed.), The Blackwell Guide to Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics, (2006, p. 76-95.
      The Examined Life, Sara Ahbel-Rappe & Rachana Kamtekar (eds.), A Companion to Socrates. Blackwell (2006, pp. 228–42).
      An Aesthetic Reading of Aristotle’s Ethics. In Verity Harte and Melissa Lane (eds.), Politeia: Essays in Honour of Malcolm Schofield, Cambridge University Press, 2013.
      Human Diversity and the Nature of Well-Being: Reflections on Sumner’s Methodology, Res Philosophica, vol. 90, nº 3, juillet 2013, p. 307-322.
      “Précis: Against Absolute Goodness” and “Replies to Stroud, Thomson, and Crisp,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. 87, nº 2, p. 457-8 et p. 483-501, septembre 2013.


      References

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