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1Nietzsche: Thus Spoke Zarathustra (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 2006.Nietzsche regarded 'Thus Spoke Zarathustra' as his most important work, and his story of the wandering Zarathustra has had enormous influence on subsequent culture. Nietzsche uses a mixture of homilies, parables, epigrams and dreams to introduce some of his most striking doctrines, including the Overman, nihilism, and the eternal return of the same. This edition offers a new translation by Adrian Del Caro which restores the original versification of Nietzsche's text and captures its poetic brill…Read more
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326What is the question for which Hegel's theory of recognition is the answer?European Journal of Philosophy 8 (2). 2000.
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147Medical Practice and Social AuthorityJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 21 (4): 417-437. 1996.Questions of medical ethics are often treated as especially difficult casuistical problems or as difficult cases illustrative of paradoxes or advantages in global moral theories. I argue here, in opposition to such approaches, for the inseparability of questions of social history and social theory from any normative assessment of medical practices. The focus of the discussion is the question of the legitimacy of the social authority exercised by physicians, and the insufficiency of traditional d…Read more
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40After the Beautiful: Hegel and the Philosophy of Pictorial ModernismUniversity of Chicago Press. 2013.Philosophy and painting: Hegel and Manet -- Politics and ontology: Clark and Fried -- Art and truth: Heidegger and Hegel.
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125The Persistence of Subjectivity: On the Kantian AftermathCambridge University Press. 2005.The Persistence of Subjectivity examines several approaches to, and critiques of, the core notion in the self-understanding and legitimation of the modern, 'bourgeois' form of life: the free, reflective, self-determining subject. Since it is a relatively recent historical development that human beings think of themselves as individual centers of agency, and that one's entitlement to such a self-determining life is absolutely valuable, the issue at stake also involves the question of the historic…Read more
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160Hegel, Modernity, and HabermasThe Monist 74 (3): 329-357. 1991.Characterizing Hegel’s complex assessment of modernity has always depended on which texts one looks at, and how one understands the “modernity problem.” It is obvious enough that Hegel’s pre-Jena and early Jena writings do indeed partly reflect what Nietzsche called a kind of German “homesickness,” a distaste with Enlightenment “positivity,” and an appeal to the models of the Greek polis and the early Christian communities as ways of understanding, by contrast, the limitations of modern philosop…Read more
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7Bernard Williams once made the interesting point that both Wittgenstein and Nietzsche were trying to say something about what it might mean for philosophy to come to an end, for a culture to be cured of philosophy. He meant the end of philosophical theory, the idea that unaided human reason could contribute to knowledge about substance, being, our conceptual scheme, the highest values, the meaning of history or the way language works. For both Wittgenstein and Nietzsche there is no good or modes…Read more
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96Hegelianism as modernismInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 38 (3). 1995.No abstract
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75The question of freedom in the modern German tradition is not just a metaphysical question. It concerns the status of a free life as a value, indeed, as they took to saying, the “absolute” value. A free life is of unconditional and incomparable and inestimable value, and it is the basis of the unique, and again, absolute, unqualifiable respect owed to any human person just as such. This certainly increases the pressure on anyone who espouses such a view to tell us what a free life consists in. K…Read more
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7Fichte's Contribution in Fichte and Contemporary PhilosophyPhilosophical Forum 19 (2-3): 74-96. 1988.
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13IndexIn Hegel on Self-Consciousness: Desire and Death in the Phenomenology of Spirit, Princeton University Press. pp. 99-103. 2010.
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113Psychology Degree Zero? The Representation of Action in the Films of the Dardenne BrothersCritical Inquiry 41 (4): 757-785. 2015.
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119Doer and Deed: Responses to Acampora and AndersonJournal of Nietzsche Studies 44 (2): 181-195. 2013.I am very grateful to both commentators for these thoughtful and stimulating questions and remarks and especially for the care and generous charity animating their summations of the position I defend in the book. That has not always been the case in discussions of the book.Both critics rightly note the importance of the French moralistes in my attempt to understand why Nietzsche should have said that “psychology” might now (that is, for him) become once again the “queen of the sciences” and so o…Read more
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94Horstmann, Siep, and German IdealismEuropean Journal of Philosophy 2 (1): 85-96. 1994.Die Grenzen der Vernunft. Eine Untersuchung zu Zielen und Motiven des Deutschen Idealismus. By Rolf‐Peter Horstmann. Frankfurt a.M.: Anton Hain, 1991, 321 pp. ISBN 3–445‐08568‐4Praktische Philosophie im Deutschen Idealismus. By Ludwig Siep. Frankfurt a.M.: Suhrkamp, 1992, 348 pp. ISBN 3–518‐28635‐8 pb
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137Hegel on Political Philosophy and Political ActualityInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 53 (5): 401-416. 2010.Hegel is the most prominent philosopher who argued that 'philosophy is its own time comprehended in thought', and he argued for this with an elaborate theory about the necessarily historical and experiential content of normative principles and ideals, especially, in his own historical period, the ideal of a free life. His insistence that philosophy must attend to the 'actuality' of the norms it considers is quite controversial, often accused of accommodation with the status quo, a 'might makes r…Read more
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3Brusotti, Marco (1997b). “Erkenntnis als Passion: Nietzsches Denkweg zwischen Morgenröte und der Fröhliche Wissenschaft,” Nietzsche-Studien, Band 26 (1997), 199-225.
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162The Significance of Self‐Consciousness in Idealist Theories of LogicProceedings of the Aristotelian Society 114 (2pt2): 145-166. 2014.Among Kant's innovations in the understanding of logic (‘general logic’) were his claims that logic had no content of its own, but was the form of the thought of any possible content, and that the unit of meaning, the truth-bearer, judgement, was essentially apperceptive. Judging was implicitly the consciousness of judging. This was for Kant a logical truth. This article traces the influence of the latter claim on Fichte, and, for most of the discussion, on Hegel. The aim is to understand the re…Read more
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151Agency and Fate in Orson Welles's The Lady from ShanghaiCritical Inquiry 37 (2): 214-244. 2011.
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177The Idealism of Transcendental ArgumentsIdealistic Studies 18 (2): 97-106. 1988.Many philosophers have been suspicious of any “transcendental argument”. In the literature concerned with arguments such as Kant’s Transcendental Deduction, or the “private language” or “other minds” argument, there have been frequent charges that such attempts are “impossible,” spurious, or, even more frequently, incomplete, that their success depends on some controversial philosophical position, such as verificationism. A recent addition to the latter kind of charge is that a successful TA mus…Read more
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1Kant’s Theory of Form: An Essay on the Critique of Pure ReasonTijdschrift Voor Filosofie 47 (3): 515-516. 1982.
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49Response to Fred Rush and Adrian DaubJournal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 73 (3): 323-329. 2015.
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65Garrett Stewart. Closed Circuits: Screening, Narrative, Surveillance. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015. 281 ppCritical Inquiry 43 (3): 759-760. 2017.
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21Introductory RemarksIn Hegel on Self-Consciousness: Desire and Death in the Phenomenology of Spirit, Princeton University Press. pp. 1-5. 2010.
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29Photographing Mindedness: Cinematic Technique and Philosophy in the Films of the Dardenne BrothersIn Ludwig Nagl & Waldemar Zacharasiewicz (eds.), Ein Filmphilosophie-Symposium mit Robert B. Pippin: Western, Film Noir und das Kino der Brüder Dardenne, De Gruyter. pp. 17-42. 2016.
Chicago, Illinois, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| 19th Century Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Aesthetics |
| 19th Century Philosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |