•  61
    The Question of Ethics in Foucault's Thought
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 22 (1): 33-43. 1991.
  •  28
    The gift of the ordinary
    Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities 6 (2): 187-195. 2001.
  •  132
    Technology, Essence, and Everyday Living
    Research in Phenomenology 45 (3): 319-340. 2015.
    _ Source: _Volume 45, Issue 3, pp 319 - 340 This paper engages “A Triadic Conversation” in _Conversations on a Country Path_. The context of this engagement is Heidegger’s account of τέχνη and φύσις in _Contributions to Philosophy _ as they are put to work in the conversation of a guide, a scholar, and a scientist. The leading questions are whether Heidegger’s thoughts of _Seyn, Wesen_, and _Machination_ are helpful to understand and engage the pressing challenges to Western societies? Are those…Read more
  •  131
    Speaking of Mystery: An Interpretation
    Research in Phenomenology 42 (3): 307-326. 2012.
    Abstract In this paper the word mystery refers to “what“ cannot be understood or intellectually grasped; a mystery is concealed and unavailable for direct explanation. The questions the discussion raises address the decisive differences that sensibilities and feelings often make in our encounters with mysteries as well as occurrences of mystery that seem undetermined by differences of sensibility. The main topics are: mystery and eternal return, contexts of mystery, another kind of speaking abou…Read more
  •  84
    Pharmacological ethics
    Research in Phenomenology 37 (2): 239-253. 2007.
    An engagement with Derrida's "Plato's Pharmacy." The paper addresses: where wordless things exist , Derrida's presentation of what he calls true morality , the son's replacement of the father in writing, , and "pharmacological therapeia ." The paper ends with an account of "sensible awareness" and the ways in which the functions of cultural sensibility both confirm and show limits in Derrida's pharmacological practices. The paper throughout addresses issues basic to how people live in the contex…Read more
  •  88
    On the unity of Heidegger's thought
    Research in Phenomenology 17 (1): 263-274. 1987.
  •  87
    Heroes in Twilight
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 37 (S1): 151-165. 1999.
  •  165
    Genealogy and différance
    Research in Phenomenology 20 (1): 55-66. 1990.
  •  52
    Foucault, Specific Intellectuals, and Political Power
    International Studies in Philosophy 35 (2): 41-50. 2003.
  •  161
    Foucault, Specific Intellectuals and Political Power
    Studies in Practical Philosophy 2 (1): 22-30. 2000.
  •  132
    Foucault, ethics, and the fragmented subject
    Research in Phenomenology 22 (1): 104-137. 1992.
  •  53
    Differences, Borders, Fusions
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 29 (1): 16-24. 2015.
    ABSTRACT In the context of Dewey's account of habits and conduct, we understand will to refer not to the subjective agency of an autonomous person or to any kind of a priori capacity of human reason or spirit but to habitual interactions in the interdependence of people with their social and natural environments. For Dewey, this claim suggests that in the absence of transcendental guidance or a socially independent inner and given moral conscience, human natures are grounded in indeterminate fre…Read more
  •  138
  •  81
    Comments on Foucault's Anachronistic Truths
    Journal of Philosophy 82 (10): 547. 1985.
  •  136
    Cultural Borders
    Research in Phenomenology 42 (2): 157-205. 2012.
    Abstract This essay is motivated by the question, how might we describe the occurrences of cultural borders? It is organized in three sections with these titles: A. Borders of Concealment and Translation; B. Attunement with Fragmented, Differential Borders; C. Metaphors, Relations of Power, Borderlands. I limit these topics by focusing primarily on cultural borders and transformations within the United States. My aims within the context of these situated accounts are to encourage greater awarene…Read more
  •  106
    An Infused Dialogue, Part 2: The Power of Love Without Objectivity
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 30 (1): 15-26. 2016.
    Human desire usually has an object of longing or hope. The more intense the desire, the more singularly prominent its object. Sides, after all, means “heavenly body.” When people desire, they want, crave, and even covet the desired, whether the desired is ice cream, a professorship, or another’s body. What is intensely desired, even if it is not heavenly, has the status of an object with exceptional and immediate meaning and draw. When simple desire finds satisfaction, the desired’s attraction w…Read more
  •  245
    First, I engage Del McWhorter's confessional voice in the context of her thought and emphasize her claim that even "objective knowledge" often has an indirectly confessional aspect. Second, I give an account of the value of historicity and genealogy in McWhorter's understanding of knowing and subjectivity. Third, I address her reconfiguration of the subjectivity of desiring by prioritizing pleasure in the project of "becoming truly gay." Finally, I assess the meaning of her phrase, "straying afi…Read more
  •  84
    The W ork of the history of philosophy
    Research in Phenomenology 29 (1): 1-12. 1999.
  •  113
    Sensibility and democratic space
    Research in Phenomenology 38 (2): 145-156. 2008.
    People have shared funds of sense that operate in every aspect of their lives. These complex sensibilities constitute a range of often contradictory dispositions and attunements that we can describe as sensible disorders. Further, sensibilities are available for multiple differential determinations from which the ability for self-reflection and intervention derives. 'Democratic space' is an appropriate name for the region of sensibilities. Rather than naming a grounding identity, 'democratic spa…Read more
  •  105
    Interpreting Silence?
    Research in Phenomenology 50 (1): 1-16. 2020.
    The guiding question in this essay is, how might we speak of silence—interpret silence—without objectifying it and losing a sense of it in the way we speak of it. That means that prioritizing the value of direct linguistic language, comprehension, interpreting what other hermeneuts say about silence, or attempting to make it visible is not a viable option. The myths of Hermes and Metis, however, might be integral to the lineages of speaking and knowing that are more suited to speaking of silence…Read more
  •  135
    Ethics at the boundary: Beginning with Foucault
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 25 (2): 203-212. 2011.
    I mean by the phrase "taking differences seriously" freeing differences from the conceptual and linguistic formations that promote recognitions based on categorical grouping and what we might call domination by images of familiar normalcy and global similarities. 1 I have in mind a discipline of turning out of those ways of speaking and thinking that intend to bring unity and essential harmony to highly diverse events and entities. Those are ways of thinking and speaking that assume that origina…Read more
  •  155
    In a context of experiences in which events become apparent that encroach upon mainstream and reasonable good sense, this paper gives an account of the emergence of political subjects into public domains that make possible new knowledge and personal and institutional transformations. A statement by Simone de Beauvoir and engagement with Michel Foucault's interpretation of “limit experiences” help to orient the paper. The essay ends with a discussion of certain types of power and the birth of pol…Read more