•  59
    Editorial
    Empedocles European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 8 (2): 147-149. 2017.
    Abstract.
  •  76
    Some foundational conceptions of communication: Revising and expanding the traditions of thought
    with Peter Simonson, Leonarda García-Jiménez, and Robert T. Craig
    Empedocles: European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 4 (1): 73-92. 2012.
    This work presents and defines three meanings of communication taking into account some of the traditions of thought that founded our field of study. These three conceptions are: communication as an architectonic art; communication as a social force; and communication as the encounter with truth. These three conceptions are considered with regard to several traditions of thought conceptualized in Craig’s (1999) constitutive metamodel of communication theory (rhetorical, sociopsychological, criti…Read more
  •  153
    Philosophy becomes speculative when it raises questions about the ultimate nature of being and thought. What does it mean to be? What does it mean to think? How are being and thought related? What does it mean to ask these questions? These questions have occupied a central place in philosophy throughout history, but have led a shadow existence in twentieth-century thought, which has cut the tie between reason and these fundamental questions, leaving the questions in the twilight, and reason inst…Read more
  •  22
    The text explores the philosophical anthropology of Ernst Bloch and considers it in relation to contemporary debates in philosophical anthropology.
  •  155
    This article develops the foundations for a utopian theory of translation based on aspects of the philosophy of Ernst Bloch. This version is the final draft of the published version.
  •  382
    Despite the Heideggerian advice to remain silent about silence, this article explores the idea of a fundamental silence at the core of language, an idea that is present in the phenomenological tradition from Husserl to Derrida, but also in other thinkers. The relation between silence, speech, the face and identity is charted, and related to the question what it means to speak a language, and to speak this language rather than that language. The considerations establish the need for a philosophy …Read more
  •  28
    This text considers the category of the ultimate in Bloch's metaphysics and investigates Bloch's system of categories with respect to the ideas of measurment, teleology and the relation between essence and existence.
  •  241
    What cannot be said: speech and violence
    Journal of Global Ethics 6 (2): 89-102. 2010.
    In this article, I consider the moment where speech becomes violent because it wants to name at any price - something that can be felt as a desire in speech, a tension of creation and destruction. I discuss Habermas' theory of communicative action and the propositional conception of truth that underpins it. That conception of truth can be contrasted to the theory of truth as event, as it has been developed by Alain Badiou. A similarity between Badiou's theory of truth and the latent utopianism o…Read more