•  28
    Missing Ihde
    Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 20 (2): 95-104. 2016.
    This article investigates how lack of a phenomenology of technology has hurt understanding of the lifeworld. One way, as Ihde has shown, involves a failure to appreciate the instrumental mediation of experience and the extension of perception. But Ihde also fails to notice the background in which these mediations are taking place and which shapes the mediations themselves and our interpretation of them; not even the research of technoscientists takes place in a neutral atmosphere that does not a…Read more
  •  91
    Dreyfus on expertise: The limits of phenomenological analysis (review)
    Continental Philosophy Review 35 (3): 245-279. 2002.
    Dreyfus's model of expert skill acquisition is philosophically important because it shifts the focus on expertise away from its social and technical externalization in STS, and its relegation to the historical and psychological context of discovery in the classical philosophy of science, to universal structures of embodied cognition and affect. In doing so he explains why experts are not best described as ideologues and why their authority is not exclusively based on social networking. Moreover,…Read more
  •  23
    The Pleasure of Popular Dance
    Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 29 (2): 106-120. 2002.
  •  4
    Review: Science as Erotic Service (review)
    Human Studies 28 (2). 2005.
  •  17
    Imagined Worlds. Freeman Dyson
    Isis 92 (4): 755-755. 2001.
  •  9
    Das Spiel der Natur: Experimentieren als Vorführung
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 42 (3): 419-438. 1994.
  •  29
    What is an Artifact?
    Philosophy Today 42 (Supplement): 160-168. 1998.
  •  39
  •  43
    Merleau-ponty. From dialectic to hyperdialectic'
    with Jacques Taminiaux
    Research in Phenomenology 10 (1): 58-76. 1980.
  •  86
    The Play of Nature: Experimentation as Performance
    Indiana University Press. 1993.
    "Crease’s brilliantly exploited theatrical analogy places scientific theorizing back into the wider context of experimental inquiry." —Robert C. Scharff Crease attacks the "mystical" account of experimentation embraced by the positivist and Kantian varieties of philosophy of science, according to which experimentation takes a backseat to theory