

Michael Peter Davis
Introduction
Michael Peter Davis (born December 19, 1947) is an American philosopher who teaches at Sarah Lawrence College.
Life
Davis earned his A.B. in Philosophy and Government at Cornell University, where he studied with Allan Bloom, and his Ph.D. in philosophy at Pennsylvania State University, where he wrote a dissertation, The Duality of Soul in Plato’s Philebus, under the direction of Richard Kennington. He taught briefly at Dickinson College, Wesleyan University, and Alfred University, before moving to Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY, where he has taught since 1977 and held the Sara Yates Exley Chair in Teaching Excellence. From 1981-89 Davis taught philosophy in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research and from 1995-2002 in the Graduate Program in Political Theory at Fordham University. In the late 1970’s Davis began a long association and friendship with Seth Benardete, of whose thought he is one of the principal interpreters. Davis currently resides in White Plains, NY, with his wife, Susan, to whom he has been married since 1969.
Academic work
Michael Davis works primarily in Greek philosophy, in moral and political philosophy, and in what might be called the “poetics” of philosophy. He is the translator, with Seth Benardete, of Aristotle’s On Poetics and has written on variety of philosophers from Plato to Heidegger and of literary figures ranging from Homer and the Greek tragedians to Saul Bellow and Tom Stoppard. Davis is probably best known for his interpretations of Aristotle, where he articulates the metaphysical implications of practical life (The Poetry of Philosophy, The Politics of Philosophy, and The Soul of the Greeks) as well as the practical implications of metaphysics (The Autobiography of Philosophy). The other primary influence on Davis’s thought is Plato, for whom the necessary connection between the practical and the theoretical shows up in the dialogic form of philosophy. For Davis, Plato reveals both the necessarily poetic character of philosophy and the necessarily philosophic character of the literature. From Plato Davis learns that and how philosophy must be esoteric, not primarily in a political but in a metaphysical sense, a view he developed in conversation and collaboration with Seth Benardete.