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48Mediation, Continuity, and Encounter: Introducing Peirce with de Tocqueville and DeweyTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 44 (2): 191-195. 2008.
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200A poet's philosopherTransactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 45 (4). 2009.George Santayana was not only a poet but also a philosopher whose style, concerns, and even positions drew in his own time and continues to draw in ours the attention of poets and, more broadly, literary authors. He was, in short, a poet's philosopher. In so characterizing Santayana, however, there is no slight of his strictly philosophical achievement. The philosophical finesse with which he treated complex topics is, indeed, nowhere more evident than in his rigorous analysis of poetic utteranc…Read more
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50The Necessity of PragmatismNewsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 17 (54): 5-8. 1989.
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58Relazione presentata al Seminario di Filosofia Teoretica nella primavera 2015.Given the topic of the given, it would be all too easy to become entangled in highly technical disputes about Wilfrid Sellars, John McDowell, and other authors regarding how to interpret and, then, assess, their critiques of “myth of the given.” Though I am dubious whether we could within the limits of this articlemove toward resolving any of these questions, such an engagement might nonetheless prove profitable. It wo…Read more
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History, logic, and meaning : a cautionary tale and a speculative ventureIn Randy Ramal (ed.), Metaphysics, analysis, and the grammar of God: process and analytic voices in dialogue, Mohr Siebeck. 2010.
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25Expression and Interpretation in LanguageTransaction. 2012.This book features the full scope of Susan Petrilli's important work on signs, language, communication, and of meaning, interpretation, and understanding. Although readers are likely familiar with otherness, interpretation, identity, embodiment, ecological crisis, and ethical responsibility for the biosphere—Petrilli forges new paths where other theorists have not tread. This work of remarkable depth takes up intensely debated topics, exhibiting in their treatment of them what Petrilli admires—c…Read more
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152Purpose, Power, and AgencyThe Monist 75 (4): 423-444. 1992.There are various reasons for taking a second look at anything at all. One reason is to discern aspects which have been overlooked; another frequently related reason is to reappraise the value or relevance of whatever is being reconsidered. A thing might be deemed worthless or negligible because some feature or set of features has been overlooked. And this way of conceiving the thing might become so familiar, so entrenched, that it powerfully, because subtly, works against alternative conception…Read more
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38Entangling Alliances and Critical Traditions: Reclaiming the Possibilities of CritiqueJournal of Speculative Philosophy 12 (2): 114-133. 1998.
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163Present at the end?: Who will be there when the last stone is thrown?Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 46 (1): 9-20. 2010.From time to time, Peter H. Hare emphatically reminded me he was drawn to William James as a philosopher, not just a stylist. While Peter1 was throughout his life appreciative of James's efforts to articulate an ethics of belief (see, e.g., Hare 2003), he was skeptical of them in the context of religion. He felt compelled to hound the gods and their defenders (Hare and Madden 1969). Even so, the ethics of belief outlined and partly filled in by James provided Peter with crucial insights for deve…Read more
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150Situation, Meaning, and Improvisation: An Aesthetics of Existence in Dewey and FoucaultFoucault Studies 11 20-40. 2011.This essay explores important intersections between the thought of John Dewey and Michel Foucault, with special attention to the distinction between emancipation versus practices of freedom. The complex relationship between these thinkers is, at once, complementary, divergent, and overlapping. The author however stresses the way in which both Dewey and Foucault portray situated subjects as improvisational actors implicated in unique situations, the meaning of which turns on the extemporaneous ex…Read more
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144Customary reflection and innovative habitsJournal of Speculative Philosophy 25 (2): 161-173. 2011.The most effective—indeed, the only—way to make the future different from the past is, in the judgment of pragmatists such as William James, John Dewey, and George Herbert Mead, to remake the present. As Dewey notes, "present activity" is the only phase of human conduct really under our control (MW 14.184). 1 For just this reason, we must be mindful of the past and solicitous about the future as well as attuned to the present: "Memory of the past, observation of the present, foresight of the fut…Read more
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97The Task of the Interpreter (review)American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 81 (4): 694-699. 2007.
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113Neglected Facets of Peirce's 'Speculative' RhetoricEducational Philosophy and Theory 45 (7): 712-736. 2013.
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161Bebop as historical actuality, urban aesthetic, and critical utterancePhilosophy and Geography 6 (2). 2003.This paper focuses upon "bebop" as a distinctively urban movement for the purpose of contributing to the articulation of a distinctively urban aesthetics. The author examines both how the music was taken up in such cities as New York, Los Angeles, Kansas City, St. Louis, and Chicago, and in turn how an urban sensibility was expressed in this particular movement.
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741Love and Death—and Other Somatic TransactionsHypatia 17 (4): 163-172. 2002.This paper both elaborates and interrogates the transactional model of human experience at the center of Shannon W. Sullivan's Living Across and Through Skins. In particular, it highlights the need to supplement her account with a psychoanalytic reading of our gendered subjectivities. Moreover, it stresses the necessity to focus on such humanly important—and irreducibly somatic—phenomena as grief and eros.
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73A General Introduction to the Semeiotic of Charles Sanders Peirce (review)The Personalist Forum 15 (2): 437-442. 1999.
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40The life of significance: Cultivating ingenuity no less than signsSemiotica 2013 (196): 35-56. 2013.Journal Name: Semiotica - Journal of the International Association for Semiotic Studies / Revue de l'Association Internationale de Sémiotique Volume: 2013 Issue: 196 Pages: 35-56.
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206Intellectual Passions, Heuristic Virtues, and Shared PracticesTradition and Discovery 38 (3): 51-66. 2011.The central preoccupation of Peirce and Polanyi was to undertake (in the words of the former) an inquiry into inquiry, one in which the defining features of our heuristic practices stood out in bold relief. But both thinkers were also concerned to bring into sharp focus the deep affinities between our theoretical pursuits and other shared practices. They were in effect sketching a portrait of the responsible inquirer and, by implication, that of the responsible agent more generally. This essay i…Read more
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76The virtues of vagueness and the vagaries of precision: Re-interpreting James and re-orienting philosophyMetaphilosophy 26 (3): 300-312. 1995.
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59Qualities, Qualisigns, and the Shifting Boundary Between Immediacy and MediationSemiotics 1-13. 2013.
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124Tradition, Dialectic, and IdeologyAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 80 (2): 253-266. 2006.The task of philosophy is examined in reference to the actual circumstances of academic philosophy, principally in the United States. The author challenges the still prevalent tendency to conceive academic philosophy as an affair split into two camps—most often identified as analytic and Continental philosophy. Moreover, he proposes a distinctive understanding of the dialectical approach to philosophical query, one attuned to the traditional character of the relevant alternatives and also to the…Read more
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38Experimental logic : Normative theory or natural history?In F. Thomas Burke, D. Micah Hester & Robert B. Talisse (eds.), Dewey's logical theory: new studies and interpretations, Vanderbilt University Press. pp. 43-71. 2002.
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31Conceptual Tension: Essays on Kinship, Politics, and Individualism (edited book)Lexington Books. 2014.Leon J. Goldstein critically examines the philosophical role of concepts and concept formation in the social sciences. The book undertakes a study of concept formation and change by looking at four critical terms in anthropology , politics , and sociology
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