•  1
    Phenomenology
    In Herbert R. Otto (ed.), Perspectives On Mind, Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1987.
  •  407
    A History of First Step Fallacies
    Minds and Machines 22 (2): 87-99. 2012.
    In the 1960s, without realizing it, AI researchers were hard at work finding the features, rules, and representations needed for turning rationalist philosophy into a research program, and by so doing AI researchers condemned their enterprise to failure. About the same time, a logician, Yehoshua Bar-Hillel, pointed out that AI optimism was based on what he called the “first step fallacy”. First step thinking has the idea of a successful last step built in. Limited early success, however, is not …Read more
  •  25
    Was ist moralische Reife?: Eine phänomenologische Darstellung der Entwicklung ethischer Expertise
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 41 (3): 435-458. 1993.
  •  2
    Nihilismo en línea: el futuro de la tecnología de la información visto por Sören Kierkegaard en 1850
    Franciscanum: Revista de Las Ciencias Del Espíritu 44 (130): 287-300. 2002.
  •  265
    Foucault's critique of psychiatric medicine
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 12 (4): 311-333. 1987.
    From his earliest published work, Mental Illness and Personality (1954), to his last project, The History of Sexuality, Foucault was critical of the human sciences as a dubious and dangerous attempt to model a science of human beings on the natural sciences. He therefore preferred existential therapy, which did not attempt to give a causal account of human nature, but rather described the general structure of the human way of being and its possible distortions. Foucault focused his attack on psy…Read more
  • L'ordinateur à sa place
    The Temps de la Réflexion 6 (n/a): 195. 1985.
  •  297
    Comments on Jonathan Lear’s Radical Hope
    Philosophical Studies 144 (1): 63-70. 2009.
    Cultural devastation, and the proper response to it, is the central concern of "Radical Hope". I address an uncertainty in Lear's book, reflected in a wavering over the difference between a culture's way of life becoming impossible and its way of life becoming unintelligible. At his best, Lear asks the radical ontological question: when the cultural collapse is such that the old way of life has become not only impossible but retroactively unimaginable,—when nothing one can do makes sense anymore…Read more
  •  126
    Search for a Method
    with Jean-Paul Sartre and Hazel E. Barnes
    Philosophical Review 75 (4): 537. 1966.
  •  48
    Beyond hermeneutics: Interpretation in late Heidegger and recent Foucault
    In Gary Shapiro & Alan Sica (eds.), Hermeneutics: questions and prospects, University of Massachusetts Press. pp. 66--83. 1984.
  •  144
    Body and World
    with Samuel Todes and Piotr Hoffman
    MIT Press. 2001.
    Body and World is the definitive edition of a book that shouldnow take its place as a major contribution to contemporary existentialphenomenology. Samuel Todes goes beyond Martin Heidegger and MauriceMerleau-Ponty in his description of how independent physical natureand experience are united in our bodily action. His account allows himto preserve the authority of experience while avoiding the tendencytoward idealism that threatens both Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty.Todes emphasizes the complex str…Read more
  •  375
    Heterophenomenology: Heavy-handed Sleight-of-hand (review)
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 6 (1-2): 45-55. 2007.
    We argue that heterophenomenology both over- and under-populates the intentional realm. For example, when one is involved in coping, one’s mind does not contain beliefs. Since the heterophenomenologist interprets all intentional commitment as belief, he necessarily overgenerates the belief contents of the mind. Since beliefs cannot capture the normative aspect of coping and perceiving, any method, such as heterophenomenology, that allows for only beliefs is guaranteed not only to overgenerate be…Read more
  •  33
    First published in 2003. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
  •  277
    You can't get something for nothing: Kierkegaard and Heidegger on how not to overcome nihilism
    with Jane Rubin
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 30 (1 & 2). 1987.
    This paper analyzes Kierkegaard's Religiousness A sphere of existence, presented in his edifying works, and Heidegger's concept of authenticity, proposed in Being and Time, as responses to modern nihilism. While Kierkegaard argues that Religiousness A is an unsuccessful response to modern nihilism, Heidegger claims that authenticity, a secularized version of Religiousness A, is a successful response. We argue that Heidegger's secularization of Religiousness A is incomplete and unsuccessful, that…Read more
  •  687
    Overcoming the myth of the mental
    Topoi 25 (1-2): 43-49. 2006.
    Can we accept John McDowell’s Kantian claim that perception is conceptual “all the way out,” thereby denying the more basic perceptual capacities we seem to share with prelinguistic infants and higher animals? More generally, can philosophers successfully describe the conceptual upper floors of the edifice of knowledge while ignoring the embodied coping going on on the ground floor? I argue that we shouldn’t leave the conceptual component of our lives hanging in midair and suggest how philosophe…Read more
  •  111
    A Companion to Heidegger (edited book)
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2008.
    The_ Blackwell Companion to Heidegger _is a complete guide to the work and thought of Martin Heidegger, one of the most influential philosophers of the twentieth century. Considers the most important elements of Heidegger’s intellectual biography, including his notorious involvement with National Socialism Provides a systematic and comprehensive exploration of Heidegger’s work One of the few books on Heidegger to cover his later work as well as _Being and Time_ Includes key critical responses to…Read more
  •  1187
    MICHAEL WHEELER Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005432 pages, ISBN: 0262232405 (hbk); $35.001.When I was teaching at MIT in the 1960s, students from the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory would come to...
  •  3
    Heidegger: A Critical Reader
    with Harrison Hall
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 57 (1): 153-154. 1995.
  •  25
    This book is the first to provide a sustained, coherent analysis of Foucault's work as a whole. To demonstrate the sense in which Foucault's work is beyond structuralism and hermeneutics, the authors unfold a careful, analytical exposition of his oeuvre. They argue that during the of Foucault's work became a sustained and largely successful effort to develop a new method - "interpretative analytics" - capable of explaining both the logic of structuralism's claim to be an objective science and th…Read more
  •  590
    The return of the myth of the mental
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 50 (4). 2007.
    McDowell's claim that "in mature human beings, embodied coping is permeated with mindedness",1 suggests a new version of the mentalist myth which, like the others, is untrue to the phenomenon. The phenomena show that embodied skills, when we are fully absorbed in enacting them, have a kind of non-mental content that is non-conceptual, non-propositional, non-rational and non-linguistic. This is not to deny that we can monitor our activity while performing it. For solving problems, learning a new …Read more
  •  230
    Saving the Sacred from the Axial Revolution
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 54 (2): 195-203. 2011.
    Prominent defenders of the Enlightenment, like Jürgen Habermas, are beginning to recognize that the characterization of human beings in entirely rational and secular terms leaves out something important. Religion, they admit, plays an important role in human existence. But the return to a traditional monotheistic religion seems sociologically difficult after the death of God. We argue that Homeric polytheism retains a phenomenologically rich account of the sacred, and a similarly rich understand…Read more
  •  86
    Anonimato y compromiso en la época actual: S0ren Kierkegaard y el intemet
    Areté. Revista de Filosofía 12 (1): 117-131. 2000.
    No contiene resumen.