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59Review of Michael Weston, Philosophy, Literature, and the Human Good (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2002 (2). 2002.
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134Acknowledgment, Responsibility, and InnovationTradition and Discovery 36 (1): 38-41. 2009.This response affirms the content of the previous two articles but is focused on highlighting some features of Polanyi’s and Langer’s philosophies they do not emphasize. The rise of knowledge and trajectory of meaning Polanyi and Langer describe may be seen as incorporating a complex, innovative process of acknowledgment – of tradition, social norms, previous experience, and personal commitments of which one may not even be aware – for which one is responsible.
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43Jazz as Metaphor, Philosophy as JazzIn Cornelis De Waal & Krzysztof Piotr Skowroński (eds.), The normative thought of Charles S. Peirce, Fordham University Press. pp. 1. 2012.
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77Moral deliberation and operative rights: A response to Mary magada-ward and Cynthia gaymanMetaphilosophy 38 (4): 440-455. 2007.The aim of this article is to show how intimately connected Beth J. Singer's theory of operative rights is with her understanding of the deliberative process. I thus argue against Cynthia Gayman's effort to set in contrast Singer's theory of rights and Dewey's characteristic emphasis on reflective morality. Since I take the value of Singer's approach to be most evident in its relevance to the abortion debate as an ongoing deliberation, I question whether Mary Magada‐Ward sufficiently appreciates…Read more
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36Expression: A Tentative Formulation of an Ontological CategoryRevista Portuguesa de Filosofia 53 (4): 515-527. 1997.
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60William James’s Radical Reconstruction of Philosophy (review)Newsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 25 (78): 25-29. 1997.
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38Charles Sanders PeirceIn John R. Shook & Joseph Margolis (eds.), A Companion to Pragmatism, Wiley-blackwell. 2008.This chapter contains sections titled: Philosopher and Scientist Scientific Intelligence and Theoretical Knowledge Philosophy Within the Limits of Experience Alone The Conduct of Inquiry Clarifying Meaning The Theory of Signs Absolute Chance, Brute Reaction, and Evolving Law.
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176Telling Tales Out of School: Pragmatic Reflections on Philosophical StorytellingJournal of Speculative Philosophy 27 (1): 1-32. 2013.ABSTRACT This article offers a critique of a deeply engrained tendency to narrate the story of American pragmatism exclusively or primarily in terms of modern European philosophy. While it suggests alternative stories, it is principally a metanarrative, an intentionally polemical story about our entrenched habits of philosophical storytelling. Indeed, the pragmatics of storytelling merits, especially in reference to historical accounts of American pragmatism, critical attention. The seemingly si…Read more
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86Antifoundationalism Old and New (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 33 (2): 251-254. 1993.
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43Truth, Rationality, and Pragmatism (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 42 (1): 122-124. 2002.
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52Let's All Go to the Movies: Two Thumbs up for Hugo Münsterberg's "The Photoplay" (1916)Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 36 (4): 477-501. 2000.
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75A lantern for the feet of inquirers: The heuristic function of the Peircean categoriesSemiotica 2001 (136). 2001.
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39Is Peirce's Theory of Signs Truly General?Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 23 (2): 205-234. 1987.
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12The Dynamical Object and the Deliberative SubjectIn Jacqueline Brunning & Paul Forster (eds.), The Rule of Reason: The Philosophy of C.S. Peirce, University of Toronto Press. pp. 262-288. 1997.
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65Gestures Historical and Incomplete, Critical yet FriendlyEuropean Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 8 (1). 2016.“Thought requires achievement for its own development, and without this development it is nothing. Thought must live and grow in incessant new and higher translations, or it proves itself not to be genuine thought.” – C. S. Peirce (CP 5.595) Introduction: Captivating Pictures and Liberating Gestures At the center of one of the most famous anecdotes involving a famous philosopher, we encounter what is commonly called in English a gesture, in fact, a Neapolitan gesture, though one made by a Tur...
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