•  7
    Peirce’s Philosophy of Religion
    Newsletter of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy 18 (56): 16-18. 1990.
  • Introduction
    with Rebecca Levi
    Journal of Textual Reasoning 7 (1). 2012.
  •  177
    Behind the Mechitsa: Reflections on The Rules of Textual Reasoning
    Journal of Textual Reasoning 1 (1). 2002.
    After twelve years of productive work, the Society for Textual Reasoning has reason to reflect on the rules of reasoning it has nurtured and tested but has not yet adopted, self-consciously, as the rules of its textual reasoning . This essay illustrates some ways of reflecting on these rules. The first section of the essay presents a brief history of STR. The following section, the focal section of the essay, illustrates the rules of TR as displayed in a recent internet discussion sponsored by t…Read more
  •  16
    Founders of Constructive Postmodern Philosophy: Peirce, James, Bergson, Whitehead, and Hartshorne
    with David Ray Griffin, John B. Cobb Jr, Marcus P. Ford, and Pete A. Y. Gunter
    State University of New York Press. 1992.
    Paper edition (unseen), $14.95. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
  •  114
    A Scriptural Pragmatism: : Jewish Philosophy's Conception of Truth
    International Philosophical Quarterly 26 (2): 131-135. 1986.
    In HEBREW SCRIPTURES, in rabbinic literature and for most Jewish thinkers, "truth" (emet) is a character of personal relationships. Truth is fidelity to one's word, keeping promises, saying with the lips what one says in one's heart, bearing witness to what one has seen. Truth is the bond of trust between persons and between God and Humanity. In Western philosophic tradition, however, truth is a character of the claims people make about the world they experience: the correspondence b…Read more
  •  121
    Rational Rabbis, Introduction to Menachem Fisch
    Journal of Textual Reasoning 4 (2). 2006.
  • Pragmatic Cataphasis: Plenitude and Caution in Morning Prayer
    Journal of Textual Reasoning 5 (1). 2007.
  •  15
    Epilogue
    Modern Theology 11 (2): 219-227. 1995.
  •  101
    A propos de l'actualité de Charles Peirce
    with Mireille Delbraccio
    Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 91 (4). 1986.
    Des lecteurs dune récente livraison de Monist, The Relevance of Charles Peirce, pourraient chercher l'actualité de Peirce chez des philosophes contemporains influencés par lui. J'essaie de montrer que Peirce est actuel parce que son apport principal, le pragmatisme, se rattache profondément à des sujets qui nous sont familiers. Formé dans la tradition cartésienne et kantienne de l'epistemologie, l'oeuvre de Peirce intéresse les héritiers de cette tradition.Cependant, son pragmatisme fait apparaî…Read more
  •  11
    Reviewing the Covenant: Eugene B. Borowitz and the Postmodern Renewal of Jewish Theology
    with Eugene B. Borowitz and Yudit Kornberg Greenberg
    SUNY Press. 2000.
    This major intellectual response to the leading theologian of liberal Judaism provides a significant indication of future directions in Jewish religious thought.
  •  30
    Peirce’s Philosophy of Religion (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 25 (1): 103-103. 1993.
  • Jewish Sensibilities
    Journal of Textual Reasoning 4 (3). 2006.
  •  22
    Contemporary Jewish Philosophies (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 27 (2): 212-214. 1987.
  •  3
    Three leading Jewish philosophers explore what it means to participate in post modern Jewish philosophy. They contemplate where Judaism has been, the relevance of age-old Biblical traditions, and the direction in which Judaism is headed in the 21st century.
  •  196
    Torah, language and philosophy: A jewish critique
    International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 18 (3). 1985.
    Modern philosophy's fascination with language - for the last century, its obsession- may illustrate the axiom that we love to talk about what we desire and we desire what we don't have. From the perspective of traditional Judaism, philosophic obsession with language reflects the modern philosopher's dislocation from those speech communities in which, alone, language has meaning. Natural speech communities, meaning those whose origins are either unknown or referred to an in…Read more
  •  160
    This is a genealogical study that traces a “broadly Cartesian” pattern of argumentation: from Augustine’s scriptural semiotic to the “narrowly Cartesian” practice of foundationalism to Charles Peirce’s pragmatic and reparative semiotic. The essay argues (1) that Augustine transformed Stoic logic into a scriptural semiotic; (2) that this semiotic breeds both Cartesian foundationalism and the pragmatic semiotic that repairs it; (3) that Peirce’s semiotic displays the latter. In sum, Augustine’s in…Read more
  •  15
    Peirce, Pragmatism, and the Logic of Scripture
    Cambridge University Press. 1998.
    This is the first study of Charles Peirce's philosophy as a form of writing and the first study of his pragmatic writings as a critique of the modern attempt to change society by writing philosophy. According to Ochs, Peirce concluded that his own pragmatism displayed the errors of modernity, attempting to recreate rather than repair modern philosophy. His self-critique - which he called pragmaticism - refashions pragmatism as what Ochs calls a 'pragmatic method of reading': a method of, first, …Read more