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  1.  26
    Mythos and logos.John Halverson - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (4):762-762.
  2.  62
    Plato's republic and ours.John Halverson - 1991 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 5 (4):453-473.
    The politics of Plato's Republic has been all but universally condemned by modern liberal readers as totally and odiously inimical to democratic ideals. Plato's proposals for government by an unelected elite class of guardians, for censorship and indoctrination, for occupational restrictions, etc., are seen at best as stifling freedom and individual initiative and at worst as totalitarian. It has seldom or never been noticed, however, how much his polity resembles our own, for better or worse. American democracy, present and past, (...)
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  3.  73
    Social Order in the 'Odyssey'.John Halverson - 1985 - Hermes 113 (2):129-145.
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  4.  33
    Havelock on Greek Orality and Literacy.John Halverson - 1992 - Journal of the History of Ideas 53 (1):148-163.
  5.  5
    Ganelon's TrialArticle author queryhalverson j [Google Scholar].John Halverson - 1967 - Speculum 42 (4):661-669.
    The Song of Roland is a Janus-faced poem, at once looking backwards to a basically Germanic tradition and feudal ethos, and forward to the nationalistic development of a coherent French society. George Fenwick Jones has recently shown in thorough and persuasive detail how deeply rooted the poem is in the old Germanic ethical tradition. It consistently expresses the way of life of a “shame culture.” Thus virtually all important actions are motivated and conditioned by the opinions of the actors' peers, (...)
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