•  12
  •  12
    Natality, Event, Revolution: The Political Phenomenology of Hannah Arendt
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 44 (3): 302-320. 2013.
  •  2
  •  1
    Notes
    In The Event of the Thing: Derrida's Post-Deconstructive Realism, University of Toronto. pp. 143-184. 2009.
  •  14
    Thinking anew
    with Luce Irigaray
    The Philosophers' Magazine 68 27-29. 2015.
  •  169
    History, Memory, and Forgetting in Nietzsche and Derrida
    Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 9 (1): 137-157. 2004.
    In this article I begin to explore Friedrich Nietzsche’s and Jacques Derrida’s philosophies of history in terms of the persistence of forgetting within (non-subjective) memory. In section I, I shall outline the totalizing production of history understood as an unsuccessful attempt to erase the indifference of animality and the difference of madness. The following two sections are concerned with the particular kinds of non-subjective memories—memorials—that arise in the aftermath of this erasure …Read more
  •  6
    Theses on Weak Ecology
    Philosophy Today 60 (3): 651-662. 2016.
  •  7
    Fugas do Bem
    Revista Filosófica de Coimbra 19 (38): 273-289. 2010.
  •  22
    Should plants have rights?
    The Philosophers' Magazine 62 46-50. 2013.
  •  32
    Complexio Oppsitorum
    Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 50 451-458. 2008.
    Carl Schmitt’s Roman Catholicism and Political Form (1923) features a term, the importance of which political philosophy is yet to fathom. This notion is complexio oppositorum, describing Catholicism as “a complex of opposites”. Upon theorizing the complex as a non-dialectical, non-synthetical unity, I will graft its structure onto the concept of culture and its recent political incarnation, multiculturalism. I will argue that in order to remain a viable political concept, multiculturalism has t…Read more
  •  46
    Introduction
    with Russell A. Berman
    Télos 2009 (147): 3-13. 2009.
    Do we face a new rule of lawlessness? On the high seas, in matters of international law and human rights, and even in domestic prosecutorial practices, any grounds to place one's trust in the lawfulness of order seem increasingly elusive. The New World Order appears to be no order at all; the century of secular universalisms leaves us in the state of a general and all-encompassing nihilism. Still, rather than signaling a dead end rife with global despair, the collapse of everything that went und…Read more
  •  23
    Este artículo teoriza la transición del régimen global geopolítico (es decir, la política de la tierra) a régimen piropolítico, o la política del fuego. En base a filosofía política de Carl Schmitt, la tesis es que la certidumbre, estabilidad y orden arraigados en la tierra están desplazados por la anomia del fuego, como un símbolo y dominio concreto de lo político hoy
  •  122
    Vegetal anti-metaphysics: Learning from plants
    Continental Philosophy Review 44 (4): 469-489. 2011.
    By denying to vegetal life the core values of autonomy, individualization, self-identity, originality, and essentiality, traditional philosophy not only marginalizes plants but, inadvertently, confers on them a crucial role in the current transvaluation of metaphysical value systems. From the position of absolute exteriority and heteronomy, vegetation accomplishes a living reversal of metaphysical values and points toward the collapse of hierarchical dualisms
  •  1
    Given the Right—of Giving
    Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 12 (1): 93-108. 2007.
    This essay approaches the Hegelian problem of giving and givenness through the marginal figures of the animal, the child, and “superstitious humanity,”representing, in one way or another, the unperturbed relationship with immediacy. I argue that, for Hegel, the process of subjectivization supersedes these figures by learning to reject the immediately given and to accept only what is self-given. Yet, interspersed throughout this process are various imbalances and asymmetries, whereby the subject …Read more
  •  7
    To Open a Site (with Heidegger)
    Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 21 (1): 197-217. 2016.
    Drawing on the texts of Martin Heidegger, at times interpreted against the grain, I tackle the relation between ecology and economy in our era of rampant economism. I begin by outlining the ecological and economic variations on ethics and politics, with the view to the logos and nomos of dwelling (oikos). Thereafter, I consider the rise of a worldless, homeless world from the undue emphasis placed on nomos, which is but the active (actively gathering) dimension of logos. This lopsidedness, I arg…Read more
  •  2
    Pyropolitics: When the World is Ablaze
    Rowman & Littlefield International. 2014.
    A highly original theory of the political, the book explores the literal and metaphorical flare-ups in political theology, revolutionary thought, radical protests, and global energy production
  • Beyond History in History: Historiographic Threads in Foucault and Lévinas
    Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 34 (4): 419-442. 2005.
  •  58
    Plant-Soul: The Elusive Meanings of Vegetative Life
    Environmental Philosophy 8 (1): 83-99. 2011.
    In this paper, I propose an ontological-hermeneutical approach to the question of vegetative life. I argue that, though it is a product of the metaphysical traditionthat from Aristotle to Nietzsche ascribes to the life of plants but a single function, the notion of plant-soul is useful for the formulation of a post-metaphysicalphilosophy of vegetation. Offered as a prolegomenon to such thinking about plants, this paper focuses on the multiplicity of meanings, the obscurity, and thepotentialities…Read more