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12These two powers or capacities cannot exchange their functions. The understanding can intuit nothing, the senses can think nothing. Only through their union can knowledge arise. But that is no reason for confounding the contribution of either with that of the other; rather is it a strong reason for carefully separating and distinguishing the one from the other. The passages are so well known because Kant laid such massive importance on them. His claims about the strict distinction between these …Read more
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1412 Nietzsche, Heidegger, and the metaphysics of modernityIn Keith Ansell-Pearson (ed.), Nietzsche and Modern German Thought, Routledge. pp. 282. 2014.
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262Bernard Williams: In the beginning was the deed: Realism and moralism in political argumentJournal of Philosophy 104 (10): 533-539. 2007.
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1The "logic of experience" as "absolute knowledge: in Hegel's Phenomenology of spiritIn Dean Moyar & Michael Quante (eds.), Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit: A Critical Guide, Cambridge University Press. 2008.
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50Henry James and Modern Moral LifeCambridge University Press. 1999.This important book argues that Henry James reveals in his fiction a sophisticated theory of moral understanding and moral motivation. The claim is that in his novels and short stories James is engaged in a distinctive kind of original thinking and reflecting on modern moral life. Sensitive to the precarious and extremely confusing situation of moral understanding in modern societies, James avoids skepticism and presents powerfully the full nature of moral claims and moral dependence. The book i…Read more
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226McDowell's germans: Response to 'on Pippin's postscript'European Journal of Philosophy 15 (3). 2007.As McDowell makes clear in ‘On Pippin’s Postscript’ and in many other works, the interpretive question at issue in this exchange—how to understand the relation between Kant and Hegel, especially as that concerns Kant’s central ‘Deduction’ argument in the Critique of Pure Reason1—brings into the foreground an even larger problem on which all the others depend: the right way to understand at the highest level of generality the relation between active or spontaneous thought and our receptive and co…Read more
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77G. W. F. Hegel, "Lectures on the Philosophy of World History. Introduction: Reason in History", trans. H. B. Nisbet (review)Journal of the History of Philosophy 16 (1): 122. 1978.
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37¿Lo mío y lo tuyo? El Estado kantianoAnuario Filosófico 37 (80): 595-630. 2004.Kant says there is a duty to exit the state of nature, to enter into a civil state. He says this is a duty of right, not a duty of virtue. The article discusses the argument he gives to support this view, as well as the contemporary discussion on the relationship between this duty of right and the categorical imperative. The discussion is full of implications. Particularly significant is the view of the Kantian state emerging from it, which challenges the conventional account: instead of a state…Read more
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8Fichte's Alleged Subjective, Psychological, One-Sided IdealismIn Sally S. Sedgwick (ed.), The Reception of Kant's Critical Philosophy: Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel, Cambridge University Press. pp. 147--170. 2000.
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138Introductions to Nietzsche (edited book)Cambridge University Press. 2012.Friedrich Nietzsche is one of the most important philosophers of the last two hundred years, whose writings, both published and unpublished, have had a formative influence on virtually all aspects of modern culture. This volume offers introductory essays on all of Nietzsche's completed works and also his unpublished notebooks. The essays address such topics as his criticism of morality and Christianity, his doctrines of the will to power and the eternal recurrence, his perspectivism, his theorie…Read more
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224Recognition and Reconciliation: Actualized Agency in Hegel’s Jena PhenomenologyIn Bert van den Brink & David Owen (eds.), Recognition and Power: Axel Honneth and the Tradition of Critical Social Theory, Cambridge University Press. pp. 57--78. 2007.
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10How to overcome oneself: Nietzsche on freedomIn Ken Gemes & Simon May (eds.), Nietzsche on freedom and autonomy, Oxford University Press. pp. 69. 2009.Although there are several recognizable themes in Nietzsche's discussion of freedom (such as independence from societal pressures and some sort of self-rule or individual sovereignty), at many places he seems especially interested in the issue of ‘self-overcoming’. In these passages he considers freedom a kind of perpetual self-overcoming. Freedom is not a metaphysical capacity to have done otherwise, nor the unconstrained expression of one's identity, but: (i) a psychological self-relation, a r…Read more
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20Concluding RemarksIn Hegel on Self-Consciousness: Desire and Death in the Phenomenology of Spirit, Princeton University Press. pp. 88-98. 2010.
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322The significance of taste: Kant, aesthetic and reflective judgmentJournal of the History of Philosophy 34 (4): 549-569. 1996.The Significance of Taste: Kant, Aesthetic and Reflective Judgment ROBERT B. PIPPIN 1? THE FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION of the "Analytic of the Beautiful" in the "Critique of Aesthetic Judgment" is easy enough to identify. On what basis, if any, could one claim some sort of universal a priori validity for judgments of the form, "This is beautiful"? In Kant's well-known analysis of this question, the issue is reformulated as: By what right could one claim that another person ought to feel pleasure in the…Read more
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1Hegel On Historical Meaning: For Example, The EnlightenmentBulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 35 1-17. 1997.
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5As a representative of the humanities, I understood my charge this afternoon to be to offer some sort of response to what is at the very least a book publishing or market phenomenon – the flood of recent books especially in the last decade by neuroscientists, primatologists, computer scientists, evolutionary biologists and economists about what had traditionally been considered issues in the humanities - issues like morality, politics, the nature of rationality, what makes a response to an objec…Read more
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The Erotic Nietzsche: Philosophers without PhilosophyIn Shadi Bartsch & Thomas Bartscherer (eds.), Erotikon: Essays on Eros, Ancient and Modern, University of Chicago Press. pp. 172--91. 2006.
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140Modernism as a Philosophical Problem: On the Dissatisfactions of European High CultureWiley-Blackwell. 1999._Modernism as a Philosophical Problem, 2e_ presents a new interpretation of the negative and critical self-understanding characteristic of much European high culture since romanticism and especially since Nietzsche, and answers the question of why the issue of modernity became a philosophical problem in European tradition.
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3010 Gadamer's HegelIn Robert J. Dostal (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Gadamer, Cambridge University Press. pp. 225. 2002.
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384Kant on the Spontaneity of MindCanadian Journal of Philosophy 17 (2). 1987.In the Critique of Pure Reason, Kant refers often and with no apparent hesitation or sense of ambiguity to the mind. He does so not only in his justly famous destruction of rationalist proofs of immaterialism, but throughout his own, positive, ‘transcendental’ account in the Transcendental Aesthetic and Transcendental Analytic. In the first edition of the Critique, he even proposed what he adventurously called a ‘transcendental psychology’ and, although this strange discipline seemed to disappea…Read more
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100Response to CriticsInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 53 (5): 506-521. 2010.I offer responses to criticisms about and questions concerning my book, Hegel's Practical Philosophy: Rational Agency as Ethical Life, 1 first raised at a conference at Kalamazoo College and now published in this issue of Inquiry. There are responses to Richard Peterson, James Bohman, Hans-Herbert Kögler, David Ingram and Theodore R. Schatzki
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1Ernest Joos, Poetic Truth and Transvaluation in Nietzsche's Zarathustra: A Hermeneutic Study Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 8 (2): 59-61. 1988.
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 |