•  3
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    Hegel on Religion and Politics (edited book)
    State University of New York Press. 2012.
    _Critical essays on Hegel's views concerning the relationship between religion and politics._
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    Transformations of Freedom in the Jena Kant Reception (1785–1794)
    The Owl of Minerva 32 (2): 135-167. 2001.
    “The relation of a trillion to unity is very clearly understood, yet so far philosophers have not been able to make the concept of freedom comprehensible in terms of their unities, i.e., in terms of their simple and familiar concepts.” That this estimation of Kant’s, formulated as early as 1764, still holds true for the state of post-Kantian philosophy becomes evident when one attempts to reconstruct the discussion of the concept of freedom, which was initiated even among Kant’s contemporaries b…Read more
  •  1
    Dialectic as logic of tranformative processes
    In Katerina Deligiorgi (ed.), Hegel: New Directions, Mcgill-queen's University Press. 2006.
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  •  31
    Memory, History, and Justice in Hegel’s System
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 31 (2): 349-389. 2010.
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    Thinking Being: Method in Hegel’s Logic of Being.
    In Stephen Houlgate & Michael Baur (eds.), A Companion to Hegel, Wiley‐blackwell. pp. 111-139. 2011.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Problem: Perspectives on Method, Or, How to Approach Being Hegel's “Vorbegriff” of Logical Method Absolute Method and the Truth of Being The Method of the Logic of Being Conclusion.
  •  59
    Kant and the unity of reason
    Purdue University Press. 2005.
    Kant and the Unity of Reason is a comprehensive reconstruction and a detailed analysis of Kant's Critique of Judgment. In the light of the third Critique, the book offers a final inter­pretation of the critical project as a whole. It proposes a new reading of Kant's notion of human experience in which domains, as different as knowledge, morality, and the experience of beauty and life, are finally viewed in a unified perspective. The book proposes a reading of Kant's critical project as one of th…Read more
  •  55
    What Are Poets For?
    Philosophy Today 59 (1): 37-60. 2015.
    This essay is a renewal of Hölderlin’s poetic question as raised again philosophically by Heidegger, and is an attempt to frame the issue anew bringing Hegel into the conversation. At stake, first, is the way in which poetry and philosophy respectively—or perhaps in conjunction—are able to address the chief question of the time as a question of “truth.” What is it that poetry and the poet properly and uniquely do in relation to their time? Does the poet think, and how does she think poetically i…Read more