University of California, Berkeley
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1996
Oxford, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  •  68
    Who is the Self of Everyday Existence?
    In Schmid Hans Bernhard & Thonhauser Gerhard (eds.), From conventionalism to social authenticity : Heidegger’s anyone and contemporary social theory, Springer Verlag. pp. 9-28. 2017.
    I argue that, for Heidegger, to be a self is to be a particular way of making some environmental affordances stand out as more salient than other, and of aligning affordances into coherent trajectories to be followed in pursuing our projects. When Heidegger argues that the self of everyday existence is “the anyone-self,” he means that we tend to polarize situations into affordances that solicit us to act in such a way as to reinforce public, average, and levelled down ways of engaging with the w…Read more
  •  234
    Heidegger on Plato, truth, and unconcealment: The 1931–32 lecture on The Essence of Truth
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 47 (5). 2004.
    This paper discusses Heidegger's 1931-32 lecture course on The Essence of Truth. It argues that Heidegger read Platonic ideas, not only as stage-setting for the western philosophical tradition's privileging of conceptualization over practice, and its correlative treatment of truth as correctness, but also as an early attempt to work through truth as the fundamental experience of unhiddenness. Wrathall shows how several of Heidegger's more-famous claims about truth, e.g. that propositional truth …Read more