Vanderbilt University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1973
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America
  •  38
  •  37
    Reviews (review)
    Studies in East European Thought 44 (1): 67-77. 1992.
  •  37
    A Note on Vico and Antifoundationalism
    New Vico Studies 7 (n/a): 18-27. 1989.
  •  37
    The God Within: Kant, Schelling, and Historicity (review)
    Dialogue 38 (1): 182-183. 1999.
    This book brings together ten essays by Emil Fackenheim, centred on the tension between concepts of individual autonomy and divine revelation. Fackenheim is well known for a series of books, some of which are related to the theme of this volume, including a fine earlier study, The Religious Dimension in Hegel's Thought. Most of the essays in the book, which were mainly completed before 1967, have appeared already in one form or another, although some of them have been updated.
  •  37
    Knowledge, hermeneutics, and history
    Man and World 25 (1): 79-101. 1992.
  •  36
  •  35
    A New Look at Croce’s Historicism
    Idealistic Studies 35 (1): 49-60. 2005.
    The aim of this informal paper is to direct (or redirect) attention to the importance of Croce’s historicism. Though he is sometimes described as the best known Italian intellectual since Galileo, and though his influence remains strong in Italy, his impact outside Italy is not as important as it should be. Other than through Collingwood, his only well known English-language disciple, Croce has had very little influence on those writing in English. His theories, including his historicism, on whi…Read more
  •  35
    Antifoundationalism old and new (edited book)
    with Beth J. Singer
    Temple University Press. 1992.
    The debate over foundationalism, the viewpoint that there exists some secure foundation upon which to build a system of knowledge, appears to have been resolved and the antifoundationalists have at least temporarily prevailed. From a firmly historical approach, the book traces the foundationalism/antifoundationalism controversy in the work of many important figures Animaxander, Aristotle and Plato, Augustine, Descartes, Hegel and Nietzsche, Habermas and Chisholm, and others throughout the histor…Read more
  •  34
    Pavel Apostol: R. I. P
    Studies in East European Thought 29 (2): 87-87. 1985.
  •  34
    Marx’s Social Critique of Culture (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 20 (1): 73-74. 1988.
  •  33
    Enlightenment and Reason
    Journal of Philosophy 84 (11): 699-701. 1987.
  •  33
    INTRODUCTION Irrationalism: Lukacs and the Marxist View of Reason At the very least, Karl Marx and Marxism are committed to a form of con textual ism, ...
  •  32
    Foundations of Transcendental Philosophy (Wissenschaftslehre) nova methodo (1796/99) (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 47 (1): 145-146. 1993.
    Fichte is one of the small handful of philosophers on the highest level. But he is still relatively unknown, even in Germany, for a variety of reasons. These include the difficulty of his thought and its expression, which impedes even native Germans; the relatively greater attention paid to Kant and Hegel, and perhaps even to Schelling; and the lack of a critical edition of his writings. In English-language philosophical circles, beyond these handicaps, knowledge of Fichte is further impeded by …Read more
  •  32
    On war, politics and capitalism after 9/11
    Theoria 53 (110): 74-96. 2006.
    9/11 represents less a tear in the fabric of history, or a break with the past, than an inflection in ongoing historical processes, such as the continued expansion of capitalism that at some recent time has supposedly attained a level of globalization. This paper considers the relation of war and politics with respect to three instances arising in the wake of 9/11, including the war in Afghanistan, the war in Iraq, and finally the global war on terror (GWT). I argue that these wars are superfici…Read more
  •  32
    Reviews (review)
    with Alex Kozulin, Michael Weiskopf, Michael Boll, James G. Colbert, Irving H. Anellis, and Philip Moran
    Studies in Soviet Thought 27 (1): 33-71. 1984.
  •  31
    The Pittsburgh School, The Given and Knowledge
    Normative Functionalism and the Pittsburgh School. 2012.
    The Pittsburgh School, aka the Pittsburgh Hegelians or as the Pittsburgh neo-Hegelians, is often associated with Sellars, McDowell and Brandom. The views of the Pittsburgh School arise on the heels of Sellars’ rejection of the given, but differ in important ways. The difficulty, if one turns away from the given, lies in justifying objective claims to know. I argue that neither Sellars, nor Brandom, nor McDowell successfully justifies claims to know. I further question their supposed Hegelianism.…Read more
  •  31
    This paper concerns two themes: my personal experience of Russian philosophy and Russian philosophers on the one hand, and historicism on the other. My account of my limited experience of Russian philosophers and philosophy will be mainly autobiographical. My remarks about historicism will concern a single aspect of the philosophical consequences of the Soviet experience for Russian philosophy. When I come to Russia, I am always surprised by the degree of interest in a historical approach to kno…Read more
  •  31
    Heidegger's Language, Truth and Poetry. Estrangements in the Later Writings (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 44 (1): 132-134. 1990.
    Gerald Bruns has written a fine study of the relation of language and poetry in the later Heidegger, whose final phase lies beyond the reach of philosophical comprehension, according to Bruns. Bruns offers a clear, comprehensive, sensitive account of a number of main themes in Heidegger's final view in a discussion patient to a fault and always attentive to the nuances of expression, an application if one will of Heidegger's idea of Gelassenheit to Heidegger's own texts. As Bruns sees it, it is …Read more
  •  31
  •  30
    Activity In Fichte and Marx
    Idealistic Studies 6 (2): 191-214. 1976.
    Given the apparent differences in the two positions, it is not surprising that the relation between the philosophies of Fichte and Marx seems never to have been studied in depth. Books on Fichte rarely mention Marx. Conversely, works about Marx usually avoid the name of Fichte, except occasionally to mention the attraction Fichte’s thought held for the young Hegelians. Further, historians of philosophy, even those interested in the conceptual development of problems such as Windelband, do not se…Read more
  •  30
    Modernity and reason: Habermas and Hegel (review)
    Man and World 22 (2): 233-246. 1989.
  •  30
    4. Idealism, Constructivism, and Knowledge
    In Kant and Idealism, Yale University Press. pp. 201-236. 2007.
  •  29
    Reviews (review)
    with Philip Grier and John W. Murphy
    Studies in Soviet Thought 21 (1): 89-108. 1980.
  •  28
    Marx’s Attempt to Leave Philosophy (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 35 (4): 180-181. 2003.
  •  28
    Heidegger and Kantian Ethics
    Journal of Philosophical Research 31 335-338. 2006.
  •  28
    This article examines two views about the capitalism that lies at the heart of modern industrial society. We owe to Marx and Piketty two large-scale, hugely important, but very different studies of the nature of modern industrial capitalism. In Capital, Marx provides a complex analysis of the anatomy of modern industrial capitalism, which he regards not as stable but rather as over time unstable and tending toward internal collapse on several grounds, of which the most important is apparently th…Read more
  •  28
    Social Epistemology, Interdisciplinarity and Context
    with Ilya Kasavin and Evgeny Blinov
    Epistemology and Philosophy of Science 37 (3): 57-75. 2013.
    The discussion is devoted to the notion of context and its use in connection to the notion of interdisciplinarity. These two notions are claimed to be crucial for understanding how “naturalization of social epistemology” can be possible and whether it can be exhausted by an interpretation of knowledge in social context and whether it has its own philosophical importance. These questions were initially raised in the works of I.Kasavin.