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The Boys of SummerIn Randall E. Auxier & Megan A. Volpert (eds.), Tom Petty and Philosophy: We Need to Know, Open Court Publishing. 2019.
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Don't Come Around Here, Mary JaneIn Randall E. Auxier & Megan A. Volpert (eds.), Tom Petty and Philosophy: We Need to Know, Open Court Publishing. 2019.
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Keep a Little SoulIn Randall E. Auxier & Megan A. Volpert (eds.), Tom Petty and Philosophy: We Need to Know, Open Court Publishing. 2019.
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96Philosophy as a thief?Metaphilosophy 54 (4): 390-402. 2023.This is a performative piece of writing in the presence of and inspired by Richard Shusterman'sPhilosophy and the Art of Writing. It tries to show that the relationship between the act of writing and the formation of our human consciousness (philosophical and, more deeply, poietic) is a developing and growing process through history, and before it. The dominance of an image consciousness was slowly challenged and then replaced by a linguistic consciousness with the advent of writing, and acceler…Read more
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24II. Mementos of a Timequake: Whitehead’s Radical EmpiricismIn Mark Dibben & Rebecca Newton (eds.), Applied Process Thought II: Following a Trail Ablaze, De Gruyter. pp. 75-100. 2009.
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125Personalism Revisited: Its Proponents and CriticsJournal of Speculative Philosophy 19 (1): 81-87. 2005.
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73The Real Fourth Political TheoryEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 6 (4): 78-95. 2022.Aleksandr Dugin is sometimes called “Putin’s brain,” and there can be no question that Putin’s global strategy for expanding Russian power has followed quite precisely a strategic plan created, published, and advocated by Dugin beginning in 1996. This aggressive plan of political destabilization, economic hostage-taking, and ultimately militaristic invasions has been defended with a philosophical patchwork called “the Fourth Political Theory.” Dugin claims his “National Bolshevism” can stand alo…Read more
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28The Coming Revolution in Education: Process, Time, and SingularityIn Aaron Stoller & Eli Kramer (eds.), Contemporary Philosophical Proposals for the University: Toward a Philosophy of Higher Education, Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 217-260. 2018.The ideas of process philosophy in general, and Alfred North Whitehead in particular, will soon come into greater use and wider familiarity. This emergence of his ideas into wider use will be a great aid to education and to the reforming of our institutions and practices around the very different educational requirements of the sort of world that sits just beyond the horizon of our present vision. There will be discontinuities in the world to come, but there will also be continuities. Whitehead’…Read more
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65The Academic President as Moral Leader: James T. Laney, 1977-1993The Pluralist 2 (1): 127-133. 2007.
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64The philosophy of Arthur C. Danto (edited book)Library of Living Philosophers. 2013.Arthur Danto is the Johnsonian Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Columbia University and the most influential philosopher of art in the last half century. As an art critic for The Nation for 25 years and frequent contributor to other widely read outlets such as the New York Review of Books, Danto also has become one of the most respected public intellectuals of his generation. He is the author of some two dozen important books, along with hundreds of articles and reviews which have been the ce…Read more
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37Josiah Royce (1855?-1916) has had a major influence on American intellectual life, both popular movements and cutting-edge thought, but his name often went unmentioned while his ideas marched forward. The leading American proponent of absolute idealism, Royce has come back into fashion in recent years. With several important new books appearing, the formation of a Josiah Royce Society, and the re-organization of the Royce papers at Harvard, the time is ripe for Time, Will, and Purpose. Randall A…Read more
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Time Belongs to the TowerIn Jacob M. Held (ed.), Stephen King and Philosophy, Rowman & Littlefield. 2016.
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40The philosophy of Umberto Eco (edited book)Open Court. 2017.The Philosophy of Umberto Eco stands out in the Library of Living Philosophers series as the volume on the most interdisciplinary scholar hitherto and probably the most widely translated. The Italian philosopher's name and works are well known in the humanities, both his philosophical and literary works being translated into fifteen or more languages. Eco is a founder of modern semiotics and widely known for his work in the philosophy of language and aesthetics. He is also a leading figure in th…Read more
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6IntroductionIn James Beauregard, Giusy Gallo & Claudia Stancati (eds.), The person at the crossroads: a philosophical approach, Vernon Press. pp. 1-2. 2020.
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67“A Necessary Shadow of Being”: Irony, Imagination, and Personal IdentityStudia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 17 (2): 21-45. 2022.This is the second of the essays on the existential-ontological ground of otherness, in which we see this ground as essentially entwined with our personhood and our personal identities. We analyze irony as both a “mechanism” of constituting these very identities and as an act revealing their self-altering nature. Irony in our view — informed by Kierkegaard, phenomenology, and psychoanalysis — is a subtle existential strategy by means of which subjectivity (not “the subject”) not only asserts its…Read more
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54Strangers in the Hands of an Angry “I”: On the Immediacy of Other PersonsStudia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 17 (1): 5-26. 2022.In the first of two essays on the ontological ground of otherness, and its phenomenological availability, we argue that what we call the “occasion” within the encounter of others are sources as well as re-sources for disclosing the results of a construction and concealment of a secret identity, one we keep from ourselves even though we have created it. Yet, individuals are capable of returning their encounters to the well of sensus communis, and that sensus communis is as natural as it is cultur…Read more
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87The Sherpa and the Sage: Neville on the Determinate and the PossibleAmerican Journal of Theology and Philosophy 36 (1): 37-50. 2015.
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42Philosophy of Culture as Theory, Method, and Way of Life: Contemporary Reflections and Applications (edited book)Philosophy as a Way of Life. 2022.The authors of this collection argue that all philosophy is really philosophy of culture and that through it we can live more meaningful, flourishing, and wisely guided lives.
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96To Serve Man? Rod Serling and Effective DestiningEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 4 (4): 190-204. 2021.Popular culture is a vital part of the philosophy of culture. Immersion in the world of popular culture provides an immanent understanding, and after all, some of what is merely popular culture today will be the high culture of tomorrow. The genre of science fiction is one of the more important and durable forms of cultural and social criticism. Science fiction narratives guide our imaginations into the relation between the might-be and the might-have-been. The central idea of this paper is that…Read more
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76The Life of the ImageEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 4 (1): 1-6. 2020.Preview: Bergson noted that the cinematographic image does not really move. It is, then as now, a series of still photographs. The real motion in such images is produced by machinery, which imparts a kinesis, an energy of movement, to the succession of fixed images. Our perception then endows such images with their “life,” insofar as they can be said to possess life. It is an illusion, it is “virtual” both as space and time. The real duration, as generated by the machinery or as lived by the per…Read more
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80Eco on Interpreting the Sign: The Limits of Narrating that which Cannot Be TheorizedEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 4 (1): 102-109. 2020.Eco says that which cannot be theorized must be narrated. What about that which cannot be narrated? What must we do about the limits of interpretation, especially as narration. This review essay takes a method from Giambattista Vico and applies it to the interpretation of Laurent Binet’s portrayal of Umberto Eco in his novel The Seventh Function of Language. Comparing the character of Eco with the thought of the historical Eco we find coincidences and other angles at incidence that reveal some p…Read more
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61Cassirer: The Coming of a New HumanismEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 2 (3): 7-26. 2018.The various efforts to put the idea of humanity on a secure ethical, political, and social base have not succeeded. The various post-humanist and transhumanist programs are inadequate. Our deep-seated suspicion of our deepest selves and motives is understandable in light of the barbarity of the twentieth century, but humanism is not to blame. The thought of Ernst Cassirer holds a framework for a new humanism, once it is rid of certain colonialist, triumphalist, and Eurocentric ideas that distort…Read more
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58Scheler and the Very Existence of the ImpersonalEidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 2 (1): 74-86. 2018.Usually philosophers worry about the existence of mind, or consciousness, or persons, or other difficult-to-explain phenomena. Having posited matter or nature, or fields, they wonder where can person or consciousness originate? This kind of thinking is backward. Only persons ask such questions. Persons exist. I turn the tables on the traditional problem of person by asking whether anything impersonal really exists. I argue that the impersonal almost exists, using the theory of feeling of Max Sch…Read more
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