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Eric S. Nelson

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
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  •  Publications
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 More details
  • Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
    Humanities
    Regular Faculty
Emory University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2002
CV
Homepage
Clear Water Bay, Sai Kung, New Territories, Hong Kong
0000-0002-9141-4246
Areas of Specialization
19th Century Philosophy
20th Century Philosophy
Philosophical Traditions
Areas of Interest
17th/18th Century Philosophy
Asian Philosophy
European Philosophy
Philosophical Traditions
  • All publications (161)
  •  2697
    非对称伦理学与世界公民主义宽容悖论
    吉林大学社会科学学报 54 (3): 101-107. 2014.
    Derrida: HospitalityToleranceCosmopolitanism, MiscEmmanuel Levinas
  •  1070
    What Is Enlightenment: Can China Answer Kant’s Question? By Wei Zhang
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 38 (4): 666-669. 2011.
    Chinese Philosophy: Topics, Misc
  •  1037
    Self-Reflection, Interpretation, and Historical Life in Dilthey
    In Hans-Ulrich Lessing, Rudolf A. Makkreel & Riccardo Pozzo (eds.), Recent Contributions to Dilthey’s Philosophy of the Human Sciences, Frommann-holzboog Verlag. 2011.
    Wilhelm Dilthey
  •  775
    Introduction: Intersections between Chinese and Western Philosophies
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 39 (S1): 5-9. 2012.
    Chinese Philosophy: Topics, Misc
  •  610
    The Complicity of the Ethical: Causality, Karma, and Violence in Buddhism and Levinas
    In Levinas and Asian Thought, Duquesne University Press. pp. 99-114. 2013.
    Violence, MiscBuddhismEmmanuel Levinas
  •  596
    "Zongjiao weiji, lunli shenghuo ji Ke'erkaiguo'er de Jidujiao shiji de pipan" 宗教危機、倫理生活及克爾凱郭爾的基督教世界的批判
    Research on Fundamentals of Philosophy Jilin University 哲學基礎理論研究 (Beijing: Zhongguo Shehui Kexue Chubanshe, 2016) 2016 204-215. 2016.
    Søren Kierkegaard
  • Heidegger and Dilthey: A difference in interpretation
    In Francois Raffoul & Eric S. Nelson (eds.), The Bloomsbury Companion to Heidegger, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 129. 2013.
    Hermeneutics, MiscMartin HeideggerWilhelm Dilthey
  •  2426
    Recognition and Resentment in the Confucian Analects
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 40 (2): 287-306. 2013.
    Early Confucian “moral psychology” developed in the context of undoing reactive emotions in order to promote relationships of reciprocal recognition. Early Confucian texts diagnose the pervasiveness of reactive emotions under specific social conditions and respond with the ethical-psychological mandate to counter them in self-cultivation. Undoing negative affects is a basic element of becoming ethically noble, while the ignoble person is fixated on limited self-interested concerns and feelings o…Read more
    Early Confucian “moral psychology” developed in the context of undoing reactive emotions in order to promote relationships of reciprocal recognition. Early Confucian texts diagnose the pervasiveness of reactive emotions under specific social conditions and respond with the ethical-psychological mandate to counter them in self-cultivation. Undoing negative affects is a basic element of becoming ethically noble, while the ignoble person is fixated on limited self-interested concerns and feelings of being unrecognized. Western ethical theory typically accepts equality and symmetry as conditions of disentangling resentment; yet this task requires the asymmetrical recognition of others. Confucian ethics integrates a nuanced and realistic moral psychology with the normatively oriented project of self-cultivation necessary for dismantling complex negative emotions in promoting a condition of humane benevolence that is oriented toward others and achieved through self-cultivation
    Classical Confucianism, Misc
  • Begründbarkeit und Unergründlichkeit bei Wilhelm Dilthey
    Existentia 12 (1-2): 1-10. 2002.
    Wilhelm Dilthey
  •  1
    Heidegger and the hermeneutics of facticity
    Existentia 11 (3-4): 323. 2001.
    Martin Heidegger
  •  2494
    Naturalism and Anti-Naturalism in Nietzsche
    Archives of the History of Philosophy and of Social Thought 58 213-227. 2013.
    Nietzsche has been associated with naturalism due to his arguments that morality, religion, metaphysics, and consciousness are products of natural biological organisms and ultimately natural phenomena. The subject and its mental life are only comprehensible in relation to natural desires, drives, impulses, and instincts. I argue that such typical natu-ralizing tendencies do not exhaust Nietzsche’s project, since they occur in the context of his critique of “nature” and metaphysical, speculative,…Read more
    Nietzsche has been associated with naturalism due to his arguments that morality, religion, metaphysics, and consciousness are products of natural biological organisms and ultimately natural phenomena. The subject and its mental life are only comprehensible in relation to natural desires, drives, impulses, and instincts. I argue that such typical natu-ralizing tendencies do not exhaust Nietzsche’s project, since they occur in the context of his critique of “nature” and metaphysical, speculative, and scientific naturalisms. Nie-tzsche challenges otherworldly projections of this-worldly beings, as his naturalistic in-terpreters claim, but further the idolization of immanent worldly natural phenomena, in-cluding science itself. “Nature” is an idealization of natural organisms and environments in which its construction, projection, and interpretation is forgotten. Nietzsche strategical-ly uses naturalistic scientific strategies of explanation and demystification, while demys-tifying science, positivism, and naturalism for the sake of life. These do not provide either certainties or foundations for knowledge or life. Naturalism would be anti-natural if it denies of multiplicity and conflict of the forces of life, bracketing the natural and his-torical conditions of existence, and the interpretive and perspectival character of life and knowledge. The nexus of nature and history in Nietzsche is better clarified through his portrayal of the feeling of life and its intensification, attenuation, and transformation in relation to the forces and conditions of life, which encompass processes of socialization and interpretive and artistic individuation in the context of a life.
    Nietzsche: NaturalismNietzsche: Philosophy of Science
  •  678
    Biological and Historical Life: Heidegger between Levinas and Dilthey
    In Scott M. Campbell & Paul W. Bruno (eds.), The Science, Politics, and Ontology of Life-Philosophy, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 15. 2013.
    Martin HeideggerWilhelm DiltheyEmmanuel Levinas
  •  1280
    Virtue and Violence in Theravada and Sri Lankan Buddhism
    In Chanju Mun and Ronald S. Green (ed.), Buddhist Roles in Peacemaking, Blue Pine Books. pp. 199-233. 2009.
    Theravada Buddhist Philosophy
  •  1599
    Leibniz and China: Religion, Hermeneutics, and Enlightenment
    Religion in the Age of Enlightenment (RAE) 1. 2009.
    Religious Inclusivism and ExclusivismChinese Philosophy: Topics, MiscChinese Philosophy: Hermeneutic…Read more
    Religious Inclusivism and ExclusivismChinese Philosophy: Topics, MiscChinese Philosophy: HermeneuticsHermeneuticsLeibniz: Philosophy of Religion
  •  64
    The Secular, the Religious, and the Ethical in Kierkegaard and Levinas
    In Claudia Welz & Karl Verstrynge (eds.), Despite Oneself: Subjectivity and its Secret in Kierkegaard and Levinas, Turnshare. pp. 91--109. 2008.
    Søren KierkegaardEmmanuel Levinas
  •  3262
    Responding with dao : Early daoist ethics and the environment
    Philosophy East and West 59 (3). 2009.
    Early Daoism, as articulated in the Daodejing and the Zhuangzi, indirectly addresses environmental issues by intimating a non-reductive naturalistic ethics calling on humans to be open and responsive to the specificities and interconnections of the world and environment to which they belong. "Dao" is not a substantial immanent or transcendent entity but the lived enactment of the intrinsic worth of the "myriad things" and the natural world occurring through how humans address and are addressed b…Read more
    Early Daoism, as articulated in the Daodejing and the Zhuangzi, indirectly addresses environmental issues by intimating a non-reductive naturalistic ethics calling on humans to be open and responsive to the specificities and interconnections of the world and environment to which they belong. "Dao" is not a substantial immanent or transcendent entity but the lived enactment of the intrinsic worth of the "myriad things" and the natural world occurring through how humans address and are addressed by them. Early Daoism potentially corrects both anthropocentrism and biocentrism in environmental ethics by disclosing the things themselves in the context of the selfcultivation of life. Given increasing environmental devastation and the dominance of views, practices, and institutions reducing nature to a background and/or raw material for human activity, this "ethics of encounter" discloses the life of things as inexhaustibly more than human projects and constructs, extending ethical recognition and responsibility beyond social relations and the social self
    Chinese Philosophy: EthicsEnvironmental PhilosophyClassical Daoism, Misc
  •  34
    Heidegger, Levinas, and the Other of History
    In John E. Drabinski and Eric S. Nelson (ed.), Between Levinas and Heidegger, Suny. pp. 51-72. 2014.
    Philosophy of HistoryMartin HeideggerEmmanuel Levinas
  •  1
    Steven Galt Crowell, Husserl, Heidegger, and the Space of Meaning (review)
    Philosophy in Review 23 (3): 171-173. 2003.
    Martin HeideggerHusserl: Philosophy of Mind, MiscHusserl and Continental Philosophers, MiscIntention…Read more
    Martin HeideggerHusserl: Philosophy of Mind, MiscHusserl and Continental Philosophers, MiscIntentionality, Misc
  •  1407
    Individuation, Responsiveness, Translation: Heidegger’s Ethics
    In Frank Schalow (ed.), Heidegger, Translation, and the Task of Thinking: Essays in Honor of Parvis Emad, Springer. 2011.
    Martin Heidegger
  •  40
    First page preview
    Journal of Military Ethics 2 (3). 2003.
  •  1560
    Impure Phenomenology: Dilthey, Epistemology, and the Task of Interpretive Psychology
    Studia Phaenomenologica 10 19-44. 2010.
    Responding to critiques of Dilthey’s interpretive psychology, I revisit its relation with epistemology and the human sciences. Rather than reducing knowledge to psychology and psychology to subjective understanding, Dilthey articulated the epistemic worth of a psychology involving (1) an impure phenomenology of embodied, historically-situated, and worldly consciousness as individually lived yet complicit with its naturally and socially constituted contexts, (2) experience- and communication-orie…Read more
    Responding to critiques of Dilthey’s interpretive psychology, I revisit its relation with epistemology and the human sciences. Rather than reducing knowledge to psychology and psychology to subjective understanding, Dilthey articulated the epistemic worth of a psychology involving (1) an impure phenomenology of embodied, historically-situated, and worldly consciousness as individually lived yet complicit with its naturally and socially constituted contexts, (2) experience- and communication-oriented processes of interpreting others, (3) the use of third-person structural-functional analysis and causal explanation, and (4) a recognition of the ungroundability, facticity, and conflict inherent in knowledge and life.
    PhenomenologyWilhelm DiltheyPhilosophy of PsychologyEpistemology of Specific DomainsSelf-KnowledgeHu…Read more
    PhenomenologyWilhelm DiltheyPhilosophy of PsychologyEpistemology of Specific DomainsSelf-KnowledgeHusserl: Phenomenology
  •  930
    什么缺失了? 海德格尔《存在与时间》的不完整性与失败
    社会科学辑刊 2015 (1). 2015.
    (摘要)在哲学史上,许多学者阐释了《存在与时间》的碎片化和"失败",海德格尔本人对此也提出了三 种阐辛辛《存在与时间》因出版条件导致了偶然的不完整性,这种不完整性后来又作为存在历史的一部分而被提出。在思想(或未思)与偶然的经验意义上或存在者意义上生存着的 "作者"之间,存在着"间隙",关于这个"间隙"的研究表明:在海德格尔的哲学生涯中,他对《存在与时间》的重要性做出的最好阐樨蕴含着一种关于"生活与著作"之间关系的理解,其中包含对生活经历的批判性理解和反思在内的理解,这种理解不同于海德格尔本人所坚持的更接近于解释学视角和阐择策略的理解。
    Martin Heidegger
  •  3
    Dilthey and Carnap: Empiricism, Life-Philosophy, and Overcoming Metaphysics
    Pli 23. 2012.
    Carnap: OntologyCarnap, MiscWilhelm DiltheyContinental Philosophy
  •  716
    Life and World
    In Jeff Malpas & Hans-Helmuth Gander (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Hermeneutics, Routledge. 2014.
    Hermeneutics, Misc
  •  3193
    科技和道: 布伯, 海德格尔和道家
    长白学刊 2014 (1): 9-16. 2014.
    Jewish EthicsMartin HeideggerPhilosophy of Technology, MiscContemporary Daoism
  • Who is the other to me? Levinas, Asymmetrical Ethics and Socio-Political Equality
    MonoKL 8 454-466. 2010.
    Emmanuel LevinasEquality
  •  123
    The Frankfurt school in exile (review)
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 48 (3): 406-407. 2010.
    Wheatland intends in this work to demythologize the "Frankfurt school" and answer a lacuna by providing a detailed social history of its American exile and reception. He undertakes the first task by distinguishing the "Horkheimer circle" from later portrayals of the continuity and homogeneity of their thought, the mystique of theorizing in the "splendid isolation" of alienated exile, and their significance for the radical politics of the 1960s. Although it is doubtful that many philosophers and …Read more
    Wheatland intends in this work to demythologize the "Frankfurt school" and answer a lacuna by providing a detailed social history of its American exile and reception. He undertakes the first task by distinguishing the "Horkheimer circle" from later portrayals of the continuity and homogeneity of their thought, the mystique of theorizing in the "splendid isolation" of alienated exile, and their significance for the radical politics of the 1960s. Although it is doubtful that many philosophers and theorists believe these myths, and the book can be unsatisfying due to its overly generalizing and partial treatment of philosophical positions and arguments, it is helpful to understanding the Frankfurt exiles' social contexts and the impact of their connections with colleagues, critics, and interpreters in American academic, Jewish, and leftist circles.Part 1 portrays the complicated efforts to re-establish the Institute for Social Research in New York and Columbia University's interest in Horkheimer and his associates. Since they offered expertise in and a model for interdisciplinary empirical research integrating sociology, psychology, and theory, they were a solution to the decline of Columbia's sociology program, which was interested in expanding empirical social research in a situation of intense competition for funding. While fears of their Marxist connections persisted, the exiles' ever
    Critical Theory
  •  1131
    Interpreting Practice
    Idealistic Studies 38 (1-2): 105-122. 2008.
    This paper explores Dilthey’s radical transformation of epistemology and the human sciences through his projects of a critique of historically embodied reason and his hermeneutics of historically mediated life. Answering criticisms that Dilthey overly depends on epistemology, I show how for Dilthey neither philosophy nor the human sciences should be reduced to their theoretical, epistemological, or cognitive dimensions. Dilthey approaches both immediate knowing (Wissen) and theoretical knowledge…Read more
    This paper explores Dilthey’s radical transformation of epistemology and the human sciences through his projects of a critique of historically embodied reason and his hermeneutics of historically mediated life. Answering criticisms that Dilthey overly depends on epistemology, I show how for Dilthey neither philosophy nor the human sciences should be reduced to their theoretical, epistemological, or cognitive dimensions. Dilthey approaches both immediate knowing (Wissen) and theoretical knowledge (Erkenntnis) in the context of a hermeneutical phenomenology of historical life. Knowing is not an isolated activity but an interpretive and self-interpretive practice oriented by situated reflexive awareness (Innewerden) and self-reflection (Selbstbesinnung). As embedded in an historical relational context, knowing does not only consist of epistemic validity claims about representational contents but is fundamentally practical, involving all of human existence. Empirically informed Besinnung, with its double reference to sense as meaning and bodily awareness, orients Dilthey’s inquiry rather than the “irrationalism” of immediate intuition or the “rationalism” of abstract epistemological reasoning.
    Epistemology of Specific DomainsWilhelm DiltheyHermeneutics, Misc
  • Time, History, and Facticity in Dilthey and Heidegger
    Dissertation, Emory University. 2001.
    This dissertation is an investigation of the questions of time, history, and facticity in Dilthey and Heidegger. It is an exploration of the contextual character of experience and the scope and limits of understanding and interpretation. In particular, this work considers their historical and temporal character and relation to facticity. Facticity is that which escapes and resists interpretation, narration, and understanding. In Heidegger's language, facticity indicates the "thrownness" and "unc…Read more
    This dissertation is an investigation of the questions of time, history, and facticity in Dilthey and Heidegger. It is an exploration of the contextual character of experience and the scope and limits of understanding and interpretation. In particular, this work considers their historical and temporal character and relation to facticity. Facticity is that which escapes and resists interpretation, narration, and understanding. In Heidegger's language, facticity indicates the "thrownness" and "uncanniness" of existence which throws the "subject" and its construction of meaning into question. As such, facticity is a positive characteristic of the finitude of human existence. I offer a reconstruction of the question of history in the works of Dilthey and Heidegger through an analysis of "historicality" . The discussion of Dilthey attempts to clarify his project of a "critique of historical reason" and his grounding of the human sciences. The interpretation of Heidegger is based on Heidegger's "hermeneutics of factical life" as developed in his lecture courses of the early 1920's and his thinking of the "event"-character of being in his works of the 1930's
    Martin Heidegger
  •  2672
    Religious Crisis, Ethical Life, and Kierkegaard’s Critique of Christendom
    Acta Kierkegaardiana 4 170-186. 2009.
    Religion and SocietySøren Kierkegaard
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