-
124Tragedy, Recognition and the Death of God (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 201307. 2013.
-
777Having the World in View: Essays on Kant, Hegel, and SellarsPhilosophical Review 119 (3): 137-140. 2010.
-
171Review: McDowell, Having the World in View: Essays on Kant, Hegel, and Sellars (review)Philosophical Review 120 (1). 2011.
-
81Hegel, Fichte and the pragmatic contexts of moral judgmentIn Espen Hammer (ed.), German Idealism: Contemporary Perspectives, Routledge. 2007.Hegel’s treatment of ‘Moralität’ in both the Phenomenology of Spirit and the Philosophy of Right provides important clues as to how he conceives the recognitive dynamics of modern moral life. As ‘spirit that is certain of itself’, morality as comprehended in the Phenomenology is the final form of spirit [Geist], which, in Hegel’s exposition, follows ‘reason’ which itself had followed ‘consciousness’ and ‘self-consciousness’. Spirit had first been considered in its objective form as an ‘in itself…Read more
-
14The Metaphysical and Theological Commitments of Idealism: Kant, Hegel, HegelianismIn Douglas Moggach (ed.), Politics, Religion, and Art: Hegelian Debates, Northwestern University Press. 2012.It is sometimes said that changes in academic philosophy in the twentieth century reflected a process in which a discipline that had been earlier closely tied to institutional religion became increasingly laicized and secularized.1 In line with this idea, the idealist philosophy that had flowered within British philosophy at the end of the nineteenth century can look like the last and ill-fated attempt of a Victorian religious sensibility to guard itself against a post-Darwinian God-less view of…Read more
-
59German IdealismIn George Klosko (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of Political Philosophy, Oxford University Press Uk. pp. 348. 2013.
-
41(Author’s reply at “Author-Meets-Critics” session (on Paul Redding, Analytic Philosophy and the Return of Hegelian Thought) at the Annual Meeting of the American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, Vancouver, April 10, 2009. Robert Brandom’s “critic’s” contribution is available as “Hegel and Analytic Philosophy” from his website http://www.pitt.edu/~brandom/.).
-
4George di Giovanni, ed., Karl Leonhard Reinhold and the Enlightenment (review)Philosophy in Review 31 (4): 256-259. 2011.
-
1485An Hegelian Solution to a Tangle of Problems Facing Brandom'S Analytic PragmatismBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 23 (4): 657-680. 2015.In his program of analytic pragmatism, Robert Brandom has presented a thoroughgoing reinterpretation of the place of analytic philosophy in the history of philosophy by linking his own non-representational ‘inferentialist’ approach to semantics to the rationalist – idealist tradition, and in particular, to Hegel. Brandom, however, has not been without his critics in regard to both his approach to semantics and his interpretation of Hegel. Here I single out four interlinked problematic areas faci…Read more
-
144Leibniz and Newton on Space, Time and the TrinityJournal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 7 (16): 26-41. 2011.Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, who was born in 1646 just before the end of the Thirty Years War and who died 1716, is surely one of the most bizarre and interesting of the early modern philosophers. He was an astonishing polymath, and responsible for some of the most advanced work in the sciences of his day—he was, for instance, the co-inventor along with Newton, of differential calculus, and is generally recognized as the greatest logician of the early modern period, responsible for advances in log…Read more
-
1753The Necessity of History for Philosophy – Even Analytic PhilosophyJournal of the Philosophy of History 7 (3): 299-325. 2013.Analytic philosophers are often said to be indifferent or even hostile to the history of philosophy – that is, not to the idea of history of philosophy as such, but regarded as a species of the genus philosophy rather than the genus history. Here it is argued that such an attitude is actually inconsistent with approaches within the philosophies of mind that are typical within analytic philosophy. It is suggested that the common “argument rather than pedigree” claim – that is, that claim that phi…Read more
-
158Hermeneutic or Metaphysical Hegelianism? Kojève’s DilemmaThe Owl of Minerva 22 (2): 175-189. 1991.Between 1933 and 1939 Alexandre Kojève gave his series of celebrated lectures on Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit at the École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris. Importantly, Kojève claimed to be reading Hegel in the wake of a philosopher whom he considered to be, along with Marx, the only important philosopher since Hegel - Martin Heidegger, whose Being and Time had appeared in 1927. Indeed, Kojève went so far as to claim that Hegel’s Phenomenology “would probably never have been understood if…Read more
-
70Philosophy and Non-Philosophy Since Merleau-Ponty (review)Philosophy and Literature 14 (1): 190-191. 1990.
Areas of Specialization
| 19th Century Philosophy |
| 20th Century Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
| European Philosophy |
PhilPapers Editorships
| G. W. F. Hegel |