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163Between Nature and SpiritIn David S. Stern (ed.), Essays on Hegel's Philosophy of Subjective Spirit, State University of New York Press. pp. 121-137. 2014.Hegel’s examination of habit in his subjective spirit sits at a critical juncture between nature and spirit. This ‘second nature’ has often been interpreted as leaving nature behind. This paper argues that Hegel’s examination of habit should not be understood in this way. While habit bridges the gap between nature and spirit it cannot be understood as a mere transition point. Habit represents a distinct way of considering the spirit-nature relation that challenges the common Kantian inspired dis…Read more
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5Beyond an Ontological Foundation for The Philosophy of RightSouthern Journal of Philosophy 39 (S1): 139-145. 2010.
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98Practice, Ethical Life and Normative Authority: The Problem of Alienation in Steven Vogel's Environmental PhilosophyEnvironmental Values 32 (6): 719-737. 2023.In Thinking like a Mall Steven Vogel argues that there is no authoritative nature independent of human standards to which one can appeal to correct damaging environmental practices. Human practices are the only basis for interpreting the environment and our ecologically destructive practices have made our environment into the degraded thing that it is. Revising these flawed practices requires becoming alienated from them; only then can we be responsible for them. Alienation is overcome by a demo…Read more
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63The role of Bildung in Hegel’s philosophy of historyIntellectual History Review 31 (3): 445-462. 2021.The notion of Bildung comes to prominence in the second half of the eighteenth century. It was originally conceived to capture the cultural conditions by which an individual becomes a moral agent. In Hegel’s thought, it develops a much more expansive role; it is at the heart of his socio-historical project. Bildung is Hegel’s theory of culture, but for Hegel, is not just the way in which individuals are cultivated, the process by which individuals internalise the norms of their society, or devel…Read more
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421. Poststructuralism and Modern European PhilosophyIn Benoît Dillet, Iain MacKenzie & Robert Porter (eds.), The Edinburgh Companion to Poststructuralism, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 23-46. 2013.
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146Sustainable Development is a Dead-End: The Logic of Modernity and Ecological CrisisEnvironmental Values 30 (3): 277-296. 2021.This paper examines the theory of sustainable development presented by Jeffrey Sachs in The Age of Sustainable Development. While Sustainable Development ostensibly seeks to harmonise the conflict between ecological sustainability and human development, the paper argues this is impossible because of the conceptual frame it employs. Rather than allowing for a re-conceptualisation of the human–nature relation, Sustainable Development is simply the latest and possibly last attempt to advance the co…Read more
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2114The Problem of Nature in Hegel's Philosophy of RightHegel Bulletin 42 (1): 96-113. 2021.The notion of being-at-home-in-otherness is the distinctive way of thinking of freedom that Hegel develops in his social and political thought. When I am at one with myself in social and political structures they are not external powers to which I am subjected but are rather constitutive of my self-relation, that is my self-conception is mediated andexpandedthrough those objective structures. How successfully Hegel may achieve being-at-home-in-otherness with regard to these objective structures …Read more
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417Habit and the Limits of the Autonomous SubjectBody and Society 19 (2-3): 58-82. 2013.After briefly describing the history and significance of the nature–reason dualism for philosophy this article examines why much of the Kantian inspired examination of norms and ethics continues to appeal to this division. It is argued that much of what is claimed to be rationally legitimated norms can, at least in part, be understood as binding on actions and beliefs, not because they are rationally legitimated, but because they are habituated. Drawing on Hegel’s discussion of ethical life and …Read more
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43Hegel : Self-Consciousness and Self-DeterminationIn Self-Consciousness and the Critique of the Subject: Hegel, Heidegger, and the Poststructuralists, Columbia University Press. 2014.This chapter presents the model of subjectivity that Hegel establishes in his _Phenomenology of Spirit_, which requires some examination of the key conceptual problems that he inherited from his predecessors. The development of Hegels subjectivity is set against the views expressed by Fichte and Kant. A particular concern for the Hegelian subjectivity established in the _Phenomenology_ is how Kant conceived the conditions for self-consciousness and his failure to resolve the concept/intuition di…Read more
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114The Bloomsbury Companion to Existentialism, edited by Felicity Joseph, Jack Reynolds, and Ashley Woodward: London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2014, pp. x + 406, AU$49.99Australasian Journal of Philosophy 94 (1): 207-208. 2016.
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637Community in Hegel’s Social PhilosophyHegel Bulletin 41 (2): 177-201. 2020.In thePhilosophy of RightHegel argues that modern life has produced an individualized freedom that conflicts with the communal forms of life constitutive of Greek ethical life. This individualized freedom is fundamentally unsatisfactory, but it is in modernity seemingly resolved into a more adequate form of social freedom in the family, aspects of civil society, and ultimately the state. This article examines whether Hegel’s state can function as a community and by so doing satisfy the need for …Read more
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34Robert Stern, Hegel and the ‘Phenomenology of Spirit’ , pp. xviii + 234. 0415217881 . £9.99Hegel Bulletin 24 (1-2): 101-105. 2003.
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51The Satisfaction of Absolute SpiritThe Owl of Minerva 49 (1): 83-105. 2017.Robert R. Williams, in Hegel on the Proofs and the Personhood of God, offers an important examination of the notion of absolute spirit, a central but under-examined notion in Hegel’s thought. Williams argues that absolute spirit, along with Hegel’s other core notions such as the concept and the absolute idea, is best conceived as an organic whole. This approach, he claims, best captures the self-determination and dynamism of the whole. What absolute spirit seeks to describe is how spirit can bot…Read more
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97Ecological Crisis and the Problem of How to Inhabit a NormEthics and the Environment 23 (1): 29. 2018.Abstract:The Anthropocene is distinguished by the knowledge that collective human action is damaging the earth's biophysical systems in a manner that has serious implications for human life and nature. In a recent work, Dale Jamieson has argued that despite this knowledge moral philosophy is limited in its capacity to provide the wholesale re-orientation of human practices that are required if humanity is to respond successfully to the array of ecological crises that have emerged in the Anthropo…Read more
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83Veganism, Normative Change, and Second NatureEnvironmental Philosophy 14 (2): 221-238. 2017.This paper draws on the account of second nature in Aristotle, Dewey and Hegel to examine the way in which norms become embodied. It discusses the implications of this for both the authority of norms and how they can be changed. Using the example of veganism it argues that changing norms requires more than just good reasons. The appreciation of the role of second nature in culture allows us to: firstly, better conceive the difficulty and resistance of individuals to changing norms because of the…Read more
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38Hegel, Derrida and the SubjectCosmos and History : The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 3 (2-3): 32-50. 2007.There is a simple story to be told about Derridarsquo;s relation to Hegel. He develops his core concepts such as diffeacute;rance and trace through an essentially negative relation to the central notions of the idealist tradition. Derrida has been particularly concerned to undermine what he takes to be the heart of the idealist projectmdash;the self-present subject. This paper examines the influence of Heidegger on the deconstructive critique of idealist subjectivity and presents Derridarsquo;s …Read more
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83Introduction to German Philosophy (review)International Philosophical Quarterly 45 (2): 259-260. 2005.
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235The rise of the non-metaphysical HegelPhilosophy Compass 3 (1). 2007.There has been a resurgence of interest in Hegel's thought by Anglo‐American philosophers in the last 25 years. That expansion of interest was initiated with the publication of Charles Taylor's Hegel (1975). That work stills stands as one of7 the important branches of Hegel interpretation. However the dominance of the strongly metaphysical interpretation of Hegel, which dominated the understanding of Hegel until the 1980s, and of which Taylor's work represents the culmination, has now, at least …Read more
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64Review of Barry Stocker, Derrida on Deconstruction (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (1). 2007.
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66Hegel, Derrida and the subjectCosmos and History 3 (2-3): 32-50. 2007.There is a simple story to be told about Derridarsquo;s relation to Hegel. He develops his core concepts such as diffeacute;rance and trace through an essentially negative relation to the central notions of the idealist tradition. Derrida has been particularly concerned to undermine what he takes to be the heart of the idealist projectmdash;the self-present subject. This paper examines the influence of Heidegger on the deconstructive critique of idealist subjectivity and presents Derridarsquo;s …Read more
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147Satisfying the demands of reason: Hegel's conceptualization of experienceTopoi 22 (1): 41-53. 2003.Hegel had taken the Kantian categories of thought to be merely formal, without content, since, he argued, Kant abstracted the conditions of thought from the world. The Kantian categories can, as such, only be understood subjectively and so are unable to secure a content for themselves. Hegel, following Fichte, tried to provide a content for the logical categories. In order to reinstate an objective status for logic and conceptuality he tries to affirm the unity of thought and being. The idea tha…Read more
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116Philosophy and the Logic of ModernityReview of Metaphysics 63 (1): 55-89. 2009.The paper argues against those who interpret Hegel's project as concerned above all with reconciliation. These interpreters usually take reconciliation to be a historical achievement produced by thought moving along a self-correcting pathway. On this view, modernity is its high point, since here Spirit is at home with itself, its freedom realized. The paper argues that in Hegel's assessment of philosophy's role, Spirit's dissatisfaction is more fundamental than reconciliation, and hence philosop…Read more
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2Deleuze and Hegel on the limits of self-determined subjectivityIn Karen Houle, Jim Vernon & Jean-Clet Martin (eds.), Hegel and Deleuze: Together Again for the First Time, Northwestern University Press. 2013.
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187Absolute difference and social ontology: Levinas face to face with Buber and FichteHuman Studies 23 (3): 227-241. 2000.In Totality and Infinity Levinas presents the 'face to face' as an account of intersubjectivity, but one which maintains the absolute difference of the Other. This essay explores the genesis of the 'face to face' through a discussion of Levinas in relation to Buber. It is argued that Levinas' account of subjectivity shares much in common with Fichte's theory of subjectivity. It is further argued that while the 'face to face' clarifies and opposes traditional problems in social ontology, the 'fac…Read more
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Robert Stern's Hegel and the Phenomenology of Spirit (review)Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 47 101-105. 2003.
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71Hegel’s Metaphysics of God: The Ontological Proof of a Trinitarian Divine OntologyReview of Metaphysics 57 (3): 608-609. 2004.The argument of the book develops through four chapters, all of which are heavily reliant on Hegel’s Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion. There is little engagement with Hegel’s systematic works, the Phenomenology of Spirit and the Science of Logic. Instead, Hegel’s thought of god and religion is determined almost entirely by his lectures on religion, and the argument is largely constructed through a detailed use of quotations from these lectures. The first chapter is concerned to position He…Read more
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118Beyond an Ontological Foundation for The Philosophy of RightSouthern Journal of Philosophy 39 (S1): 139-145. 2001.This paper responds to an article by Kevin Thompson (in the same volume) which argued that a systematic reading of the _Philosophy of Right requires that it be ontologically grounded. In response I argue that such an approach to the _Philosophy of Right is essentially based on a precritical metaphysics which Hegel could not support and that his "Logic" excludes as a viable interpretation of his thought
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95Tragedy and Understanding in Hegel's DialecticIdealistic Studies 31 (2/3): 125-134. 2001.At every point of transition in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit each shape of consciousness becomes a seemingly irreconcilable contradiction. It is just at these points, however, that the shape of consciousness in question shows itself as a 'higher' or more adequate shape of consciousness that is able to suspend or move beyond [aufheben] these seemingly irreconcilable differences. The transitions in Hegel's systematic works are complicated and often bewildering. One element is constant in all of…Read more
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