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328Problems of other minds: Solutions and dissolutions in analytic and continental philosophyPhilosophy Compass 5 (4): 326-335. 2010.While there is a great diversity of treatments of other minds and inter-subjectivity within both analytic and continental philosophy, this article specifies some of the core structural differences between these treatments. Although there is no canonical account of the problem of other minds that can be baldly stated and that is exhaustive of both traditions, the problem(s) of other minds can be loosely defined in family resemblances terms. It seems to have: (1) an epistemological dimension (How …Read more
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258Derrida and Deleuze on Time and the FutureBorderlands 3 (1): 15. 2004.This paper compares the "future politics", and the philosophies of time, of Derrida and Deleuze.
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241Sadism and Masochism: A Symptomatology of Analytic and Continental PhilosophyParrhesia 1 (1): 15. 2006.There has recently been a plethora of attempts to understand the key differences that separate the analytic and continental traditions of philosophy, often involving either painstaking descriptions of the divergent argumentative techniques and methodologies that concern them, or comparatively examining in detail the work of certain major theorists in both traditions (e.g. Rawls and Derrida, Lewis and Deleuze). While partly drawing on these two approaches, in this particular essay I instead propo…Read more
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163Merleau-Ponty: Key ConceptsRoutledge. 2008.Having initially not had the attention of Sartre or Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty's work is arguably now more widely influential than either of his two contemporaries. "Merleau-Ponty: Key Concepts" presents an accessible guide to the core ideas which structure Merleau-Ponty's thinking as well as to his influences and the value of his ideas to a wide range of disciplines. The first section of the book presents the context of Merleau-Ponty's thinking, the major debates of his time, particularly existen…Read more
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155Philosophy’s Shame: Reflections on an Ambivalent/Ambiviolent Relationship with ScienceSophia 55 (1): 55-70. 2016.In this paper, I take inspiration from some themes in Ann Murphy’s recent book, Violence and the Philosophical Imaginary, especially her argument that philosophy’s identity and relation to itself depends on an intimate relationship with that which is designated as not itself, the latter of which is a potential source of shame that calls for some form of response. I argue that this shame is particularly acute in regard to the natural sciences, which have gone on in various ways to distance themse…Read more
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136Direct Perception, Inter-subjectivity, and Social Cognition: Why Phenomenology is a Necessary but not Sufficient ConditionThe New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Research 333-354. 2015.In this paper I argue that many of the core phenomenological insights, including the emphasis on direct perception, are a necessary but not sufficient condition for an adequate account of inter-subjectivity today. I take it that an adequate account of inter-subjectivity must involve substantial interaction with empirical studies, notwithstanding the putative methodological differences between phenomenological description and scientific explanation. As such, I will need to explicate what kind of …Read more
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436Merleau-Ponty, Levinas, and the Alterity of the OtherSymposium 6 (1): 63-78. 2002.Suggesting that phenomenology results in an “imperialism of the same” that considers the other only in terms of their effect upon the subject rather than in their genuine alterity, Levinas initiates a line of thought that can still be discerned in the work of Foucault, Derrida and Claude Lefort. However, this paper argues that Merleau-Ponty’s work is capable of avoiding this line of criticism, and that his position is an important alternative to the more dominant Derridean and Levinasian concept…Read more
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28Jacques Derrida, Negotiations: Interventions and Interviews, 1971-2001 (review)Philosophy in Review 23 94-96. 2003.
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104Neither-Nor: Merleau-Ponty's Ontology in the "The Intertwining/The Chiasm"In Ariane Mildenberg (ed.), Understanding Merleau-Ponty, Understanding Modernism, Bloomsbury Publishing Usa. 2018.In this chapter we examine Merleau-Ponty's chapter, "The Intertwining/The Chiasm", before considering some of the criticisms made by his contemporaries and ‘successors’: Lacan, Irigaray, Levinas, Derrida and Deleuze.
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271Existentialism and Poststructuralism: Some Unfashionable ObservationsIn Felicity Joseph, Jack Reynolds & Ashley Woodward (eds.), Continuum Companion to Existentialism, Continuum. pp. 260. 2011.This chapter challenges the received doxa that the generation of ‘poststructuralist’ philosophers broke decisively with existentialism and rendered it out of date, a mere historical curiosity. Drawing on recent research in the area, it draws some lines of influence, and even argues for some surprising points of commonality, between existentialism and poststructuralism. At least some of the core philosophical ideas of poststructuralists such as Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida and Gilles Deleuze …Read more
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140Time out of Joint: Between Phenomenology and PoststructuralismParrhesia: A Critical Journal of Philosophy (9): 55-64. 2010.In this essay, I take off from Nathan Widder’s impressive book, Reflections on Time and Politics, by highlighting what I take to be one of the major internal differences within continental philosophy that Widder’s book helps to make manifest: that between phenomenology and post-structuralism (which includes the renewed interest in, and use of, Nietzsche and Bergson’s work by poststructuralist philosophers). While many deplore the use of umbrella terms like these, I hope to be able to proffer som…Read more
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333Existentialism, Phenomenology and Philosophical MethodIn Felicity Joseph, Jack Reynolds & Ashley Woodward (eds.), Continuum Companion to Existentialism, Continuum. 2011.This chapter explores some of the similarities and differences in the philosophical methods of five philosophers often considered existentialists: Heidegger, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, de Beauvoir and Marcel. The relationship between existentialism and phenomenological methods, as well as transcendental reasoning in general, is examined.
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127Review of Michael Marder, The Event of the Thing: Derrida's Post-Deconstructive Realism (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (2). 2010.In this review we consider Michael Marder's association of Derrida with realism.
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83Existentialist Methodology and Perspective: Writing the First-personIn Soren Overgaard & Giuseppina D'Oro (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Philosophical Methodology, Cambridge University Press. pp. 344-65. 2017.Without proposing anything quite so grandiose as a return to existentialism, in this paper we aim to articulate and minimally defend certain core existentialist insights concerning the first-person perspective, the relationship between theory and practice, and the mode of philosophical presentation conducive to best making those points. We will do this by considering some of the central methodological objections that have been posed around the role of the first-person perspective and “lived expe…Read more
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161Phenomenology and Science (edited book)Palgrave-Macmillan. 2016.This book investigates the complex, sometimes fraught relationship between phenomenology and the natural sciences. The contributors attempt to subvert and complicate the divide that has historically tended to characterize the relationship between the two fields. Phenomenology has traditionally been understood as methodologically distinct from scientific practice, and thus removed from any claim that philosophy is strictly continuous with science. There is some substance to this thinking, which h…Read more
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20Jacques Taminiaux, The Metamorphoses of Phenomenological Reduction (review)Philosophy in Review 24 302-303. 2004.
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257Introduction: Post-analytic and meta-continental philosophyIn James Williams, Edwin Mares, James Chase & Jack Reynolds (eds.), Postanalytic and Metacontinental: Crossing Philosophical Divides, Continuum. 2010.This chapter sketches some of the difficulties involved in defining analytic and continental philosophy, but begins to elaborate an argument for the centrality of methodology to the 'divide'.
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103Transcendental Pragmatics? Pragmatism, Deleuze, and MetaphilosophyIn Simone Bignall, Sean Bowden & Paul Patton (eds.), Deleuze and Pragmatism, Routledge. pp. 235-46. 2014.In this chapter I juxtapose the methodological commitments of Gilles Deleuze with some different forms of contemporary neo-pragmatism developed by Nicholas Rescher, Sami Pihlstrom and Joseph Margolis. Focusing upon their respective conceptions of transcendental reasoning, naturalism, and common sense, I conclude that Deleuze’s philosophy challenges some core aspects of contemporary neo-pragmatism, and hence also the prospects for a rapprochement that might warrant the name of "transcendental pra…Read more
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4169Deleuze and Merleau-Ponty: Immanence, Univocity and PhenomenologyJournal of the British Society of Phenomenology 37 (3): 228-51. 2006.This paper will seek firstly to understand Deleuze’s main challenges to phenomenology, particularly as they are expressed in The Logic of Sense and What is Philosophy?, although reference will also be made to Pure Immanence and Difference and Repetition. We will then turn to a discussion of one of the few passages in which Deleuze directly engages with Merleau-Ponty, which occurs in the chapter on art in What is Philosophy? In this text, he and Guattari offer a critique of what they call the “fi…Read more
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137The Analytic/Continental Divide: A Contretemps?In Graham Robert Oppy & Nick Trakakis (eds.), The Antipodean philosopher, Lexington Books. 2011.In the late 1980s, the American economist Jeremy Rifkin claimed that “a battle is brewing over the politics of time” because he felt that the pivotal issue of the twenty first century would be the question of time and who controlled it. I argue in this chapter that a battle over the politics of time (and the metaphysics of time) is also a major part of what is at stake in the differences between analytic and continental philosophy. Very different philosophies of time, and associated methodologi…Read more
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213Post-analytic philosophy : Overcoming the divideIn James Williams, Edwin Mares, James Chase & Jack Reynolds (eds.), Postanalytic and Metacontinental: Crossing Philosophical Divides, Continuum. 2010.This essay uses citational analyses to argue that most of the philosophers considered "postanalytic" - Wittgenstein, McDowell, Davidson, and Rorty - are not, in fact, genuine figures of rapprochement, since the particular essays cited, and/or the background literature that is cited, are not shared in common between the standard-bearing analytic and continental journals
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136Philosophy, Violence, MetaphorSophia 55 (1): 1-4. 2016.In this paper, I explore the complex ethical dynamics of violence and nonviolence in Mahāyāna Buddhism by considering some of the historical precedents and scriptural prescriptions that inform modern and contemporary Buddhist acts of self-immolation. Through considering these scripturally sanctioned Mahāyāna ‘case studies,’ the paper traces the tension that exists in Buddhist thought between violence and nonviolence, outlines the interplay of key Mahāyāna ideas of transcendence and altruism, and…Read more
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180Phenomenology and naturalism: a hybrid and heretical proposalInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 24 (3): 393-412. 2016.In this paper I aim to develop a largely non-empirical case for the compatibility of phenomenology and naturalism. To do so, I will criticise what I take to be the standard construal of the relationship between transcendental phenomenology and naturalism, and defend a ‘minimal’ version of phenomenology that is compatible with liberal naturalism in the ontological register and with weak forms of methodological naturalism, the latter of which is understood as advocating ‘results continuity’, over …Read more
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104Maurice Merleau-pontyInternet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2001.Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s work is commonly associated with the philosophical movement called existentialism and its intention to begin with an analysis of the concrete experiences, perceptions, and difficulties, of human existence. However, he never propounded quite the same extreme accounts of radical freedom, being-towards-death, anguished responsibility, and conflicting relations with others, for which existentialism became both famous and notorious in the 1940s and 1950s. Perhaps because of th…Read more
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48Jacques Derrida, Rogues: Two Essays on Reason (review)Philosophy in Review 25 (5): 343-346. 2005.
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354Transcendental Arguments About Other Minds and IntersubjectivityPhilosophy Compass 6 (5): 300-311. 2011.This article describes some of the main arguments for the existence of other minds, and intersubjectivity more generally, that depend upon a transcendental justification. This means that our focus will be largely on ‘continental’ philosophy, not only because of the abiding interest in this tradition in thematising intersubjectivity, but also because transcendental reasoning is close to ubiquitous in continental philosophy. Neither point holds for analytic philosophy. As such, this essay will int…Read more
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170Existentialism, Philosophy ofIn Michael T. Gibbons, Diana Coole, Elisabeth Ellis & Kennan Ferguson (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Political Thought, Set, Wiley-blackwell. 2014.This chapter examines the connections between French existentialism and politics. Fellow travellers like Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, and de Beauvoir saw themselves as engaging with two theoretical trajectories that for them dominated the mid-twentieth century intellectual milieu, one of which was ostensibly apolitical (phenomenology), the other of which involved a politicised understanding of philosophy (Marxism). Part of the motivation behind renewing phenomenology as existential phenomenology, as o…Read more
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328Transcendental Priority and Deleuzian Normativity. A Reply to James WilliamsDeleuze and Guatarri Studies 2 (1): 101-108. 2008.I am grateful that someone whose work I greatly admire could be the philosopher to so eloquently and succinctly cut to the heart of the problem that I posed in the previous issue of Deleuze Studies. James Williams' critical reply leaves me, prima facie, confronted by a stark alternative: either I have misunderstood Deleuze, or I have illustrated problems and lacunae in Deleuze. I will suggest, however, that this is a false alternative, and that Williams' and my divergent accounts of The Logic of…Read more
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336Common sense and philosophical methodology: Some metaphilosophical reflections on analytic philosophy and DeleuzePhilosophical Forum 41 (3): 231-258. 2010.On the question of precisely what role common sense (or related datum like folk psychology, trust in pre-theoretic/intuitive judgments, etc.) should have in reigning in the possible excesses of our philosophical methods, the so-called ‘continental’ answer to this question, for the vast majority, would be “as little as possible”, whereas the analytic answer for the vast majority would be “a reasonably central one”. While this difference at the level of both rhetoric and meta-philosophy is sometim…Read more
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104Review of Taylor Carman (ed.), Mark Hansen (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2005 (9). 2005.
Geelong, Victoria, Australia
Areas of Specialization
| Metaphilosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |
| Perception |
| Philosophy of Science, Miscellaneous |
| Perception and Phenomenology |
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| 20th Century Philosophy |