•  60
    Habermas and Religion (edited book)
    with Craig Calhoun and Jonathan VanAntwerpen
    Polity. 2012.
    To the surprise of many readers, Jürgen Habermas has recently made religion a major theme of his work. Emphasizing both religion's prominence in the contemporary public sphere and its potential contributions to critical thought, Habermas's engagement with religion has been controversial and exciting, putting much of his own work in fresh perspective and engaging key themes in philosophy, politics and social theory. Habermas argues that the once widely accepted hypothesis of progressive seculariz…Read more
  •  29
    The Presumption of Undocumentation and Revoked Citizenship
    Philosophy Today 64 (4): 969-972. 2020.
  •  37
    EIGHT / The Biotechnological Scala Naturae and Interspecies Cosmopolitanism
    In Vernon W. Cisney & Nicolae Morar (eds.), Biopower: Foucault and Beyond, University of Chicago Press. pp. 158-180. 2020.
  •  79
    Reflexive secularization? Concepts, processes and antagonisms of postsecularity
    with Klaus Eder and Justin Beaumont
    European Journal of Social Theory 23 (3): 291-309. 2020.
    This article deals with the concepts, processes, and antagonisms that are associated with the notion of postsecularity. In light of this article’s expanded interpretation of José Casanova on the secular and secularization, as well as thoughts on James A. Beckford’s take on public religions, five rubrics on the postsecular derived from critical theory and an understanding of ‘reflexive secularization’ are presented. This term focuses on secularization processes and how these practices unleash com…Read more
  •  51
    Antinomies of a Pandemic
    Philosophy Today 64 (4): 883-887. 2020.
    The essay considers three classic definitions of philosophy, namely those offered by Socrates, Boethius, as semantically enriched by Montaigne, and Kant, in order to reflected on individual and collective death. Kant’s philosophical tool of the antinomies of reason is deployed to think through the antinomies of our pandemic in order to make clear that in a pandemic there is only collective, and not individual or even national, inoculation. The false dichotomies of physical versus social, embodim…Read more
  •  1418
    Police Ethics after Ferguson
    with Ben Jones
    In Ben Jones & Eduardo Mendieta (eds.), The Ethics of Policing: New Perspectives on Law Enforcement, Nyu Press. pp. 1-22. 2021.
    In 2014, questionable police killings of Eric Garner, Michael Brown, and Tamir Rice sparked mass protests and put policing at the center of national debate. Mass protests erupted again in 2020 after the brutal police killing of George Floyd. These and other incidents have put a spotlight on a host of issues that threaten the legitimacy of policing—excessive force, racial bias, over-policing of marginalized communities, historic injustices that remain unaddressed, and new technology that increase…Read more
  •  108
    Review essay : Ethics for an age of globalization and exclusion
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 25 (2): 115-121. 1999.
    Dussel's ethics begins with a consideration of the importance of history for ethics in general and for us, in particular, in an age of globaliz ation and exclusion. The first part of the work concerns foundational ethics, where he grounds three principles: a material principle, a formal or validity principle, and a feasibility principle. The second part deals with critical ethics, where he grounds three additional principles of ethics: a principle of the recognition of the corporeal dignity of c…Read more
  •  80
    The Axial Age, social evolution, and postsecular consciousness
    Critical Research on Religion 6 (3): 289-308. 2018.
    This article focuses on Karl Jaspers’s notion of the Axial Age, some of its critical appropriation, and how in particular Habermas has returned to this idea, after several critical engagements with Jaspers’s work through his long scholarly productivity. The article, however, centers on Habermas’s selective and critical use of Jaspers’s notion in his own latest and extensive engagement with what he calls “a genealogy of postmetaphysical thinking.” The goal of the article is to identify the ways i…Read more
  •  56
  •  26
    Hugh J. Silverman
    Chiasmi International 15 459-461. 2013.
  •  153
    From George Floyd to Breonna Taylor, the brutal deaths of Black citizens at the hands of law enforcement have brought race and policing to the forefront of national debate in the United States. In The Ethics of Policing, Ben Jones and Eduardo Mendieta bring together an interdisciplinary group of scholars across the social sciences and humanities to reevaluate the role of the police and the ethical principles that guide their work. With contributors such as Tracey Meares, Michael Walzer, and Fran…Read more
  •  76
    Anthropocenic Temporalities
    Environmental Philosophy 17 (1): 125-141. 2020.
    The Anthropocene must also be seen as the convergence of the historicization of nature and human historicity, not simply metaphorically, but factually. As historical time is injected in nature through anthropogenesis, resulting in our having to see nature as a product of a historical process, our understanding of time is being transformed. The Anthropocene must be understood as a temporalization of time tout court. The key concern is what could be called an Anthropocenic matrix of intelligibilit…Read more
  •  72
    Habits of the Racist Self
    Philosophy Today 62 (4): 1243-1248. 2018.
  •  52
    The Cambridge Habermas Lexicon (edited book)
    with Amy Allen
    Cambridge University Press. 2018.
    Over a career spanning nearly seven decades, Jürgen Habermas - one of the most important European philosophers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries - has produced a prodigious and influential body of work. In this Lexicon, authored by an international team of scholars, over 200 entries define and explain the key concepts, categories, philosophemes, themes, debates, and names associated with the entire constellation of Habermas's thought. The entries explore the historical, philosophical a…Read more
  •  45
    The creature of language: Three postcards to Chuck
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 44 (7): 741-744. 2018.
  •  43
    Borders / Debordering: Topologies, Praxes, Hospitableness engages from interdisciplinary and transnational perspectives some of the most important issues of the present, which lay at the intersection of physical, epistemological, spiritual, and existential borders. The book addresses a variety of topics connected with the role of the body at the threshold between subjective identities and intersubjective spaces that are drawn in ontology, epistemology and ethics, as well as with borders inscribe…Read more
  •  151
    Discourse ethics and liberation ethics
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 21 (4): 111-126. 1995.
  •  60
    Metaphysics of Subjectivity and the Theology of Subjectivity
    Philosophy and Theology 6 (3): 276-290. 1992.
    This study calls for a re-evaluation of Schleiermacher’s relevance and contemporaneity, with special emphasis on his account of consciousness and his theory of religion. Through a critical examination of Hegel’s critique of Schleiermacher, the author argues that Schleiermacher suceeeded in overcoming the paradigm of subjectivity in some ways, and failed in others.
  •  116
    Habermas on human cloning: The debate on the future of the species
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 30 (5-6): 721-743. 2004.
    Jürgen Habermas’s recent book Die Zukunft der menschlichen Natur (2001) is discussed. Particular attention is paid to the central argument concerning the adverse effects the general acceptance of cloning and pre-implantation genetic diagnostics (PGD) would have on the moral and political self-understanding of present and future generations. The argument turns to a critique of Habermas’s central arguments against PGD, and develops at least two arguments that are in harmony with his general defens…Read more
  •  1
    Until now, North American and European philosophies have been engaged in debates about the possibility of a postmetaphysical philosophy and the consequences of the linguistic turn for the assessment of modernity; they have done so, however, without departing from the narrow horizons of their respective nationalistic perspectives. In this incisive critique, Dussel demonstrates how most of thse philosophies have either failed to give historically faithful analyses of the genesis of the "myth" of m…Read more
  •  99
    Lógica, Lecciones de M. Heidegger (review)
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 16 (2): 516-524. 1993.
  •  186
    Is There Latin American Philosophy?
    Philosophy Today 43 (Supplement): 50-61. 1999.
  •  189
    The Prison Contract and Abolition Democracy
    Radical Philosophy Today 5 209-217. 2007.
    This article discusses the fortuitous genesis of the book of my conversations with Angela Y. Davis, Abolition Democracy (Seven Stories, 2005) and traces some of the intellectual and philosophical sources that informed the specific questions and approaches that inform the dialogue. Davis’ relationships to Georg Rusche and Otto Kirchheimer, as well as to Foucault, are discussed. Similarly, Davis’ place within a critical black American political-philosophical tradition is analyzed. The essay focuse…Read more