Full-Time Faculty
Joshua Mendelsohn, PhD
Title/s: Assistant Professor
Office #: Crown Center 377
Phone: 773.508.2738
Email: jmendelsohn@luc.edu
About
Joshua Mendelsohn earned his PhD from the University of Chicago in 2019, completing the Joint Program in Classics and Ancient Philosophy. He joined the department in the same year. His primary area of research is in ancient Greek philosophy. His work explores issues at the intersection of Aristotle's logic, metaphysics and epistemology as well as the history of Aristotelian logic and metaphysics.
Selected publications
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The "premises only" view of the syllogism. In Graziana Ciola & Milo Crimi (eds.), Validity Throughout History, Philosophia Verlag. forthcoming.
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Aristotle: Epistemology. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2024.Aristotle: Epistemology For Aristotle, human life is marked by special varieties of knowledge and understanding. Where other animals can only know that things are so, humans are able to understand why they are so. Furthermore, humans are the only animals capable of deliberating in a way that is guided by a conception of a flourishing … Continue reading Aristotle: Epistemology →
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Aristotle on the Objects of Natural and Mathematical Sciences. Ancient Philosophy Today 5 (2): 98-122. 2023.In a series of recent papers, Emily Katz has argued that on Aristotle's view mathematical sciences are in an important respect no different from most natural sciences: They study sensible substances, but not qua sensible. In this paper, I argue that this is only half the story. Mathematical sciences are distinctive for Aristotle in that they study things ‘from’, ‘through’ or ‘in’ abstraction, wher…Read more
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"Men go grey": Robert Kilwardby and the Logic of Natural Contingency. In Jens Lemanski & Ingolf Max (eds.), Historia Logicae and its Modern Interpretation, College Publications. 2023.
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Aristotle’s argument for the necessity of what we understand. Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 62. 2023.
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Hale on Logical and Absolute Necessity: What You Put In Is What You Get Out. Argumenta 14. 2022.
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The way past the stripping argument in Hegel and Aristotle. In Glenn Alexander Magee (ed.), Hegel and Ancient Philosophy : a Re-Examination, Routledge. 2018.
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Term Kinds and the Formality of Aristotelian Modal Logic. History and Philosophy of Logic 38 (2): 99-126. 2017.
Dissertation
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Aristotle on the Necessity of What We Know. Dissertation, The University of Chicago. 2019.