Boston University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2001
Wellesley, Massachusetts, United States of America
  •  10
    This paper examines the different ways in which the metaphor and concept of sedimentation play a decisive function in Husserl’s phenomenology of time-consciousness. Through an examination of the different layers and implications of meaning in Husserl’s image of sedimentation, the entangled significance of this crucial metaphor is connected to other metaphors in Husserl’s thinking, including, most significantly, the master-metaphor of “stream.” The argument of this paper consists in developing th…Read more
  •  19
    Anarchism, the Shock from Elsewhere, Glissant and Levinas
    Levinas Studies 18 111-166. 2024.
    The aim of this paper is to critically situate and engage Glissant and Levinas within the hermeneutical heterotopia of the anarchist imaginary. With this orchestrated confrontation between Glissant and Levinas, I look to engage the issue of otherness as an errant—and not simply “open”—question. Despite discernible resonances between Glissant and Levinas, I argue that there exists a salient divergence between their respective ways of thinking within the anarchist imaginary. This divergence can be…Read more
  • Husserl's Phenomenology of Image-Consciousness in the Age of the Iconic and Digital Turns
    In Regina-Nino Mion, Claudio Rozzoni & John B. Brough (eds.), Husserl on Depiction, Routledge. pp. 11-28. 2025.
  •  19
    The Significance of Stern’s “Präsenzzeit” for Husserl’s Phenomenology of Inner Time-Consciousness
    New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 5 81-122. 2005.
  •  32
    Still the Noise
    In Basil Vassilicos, Giuseppe Torre & Fabio Tommy Pellizzer (eds.), The experience of noise. Philosophical and phenomenological perspectives, Macmillan. pp. 291-327. 2025.
    Rather than propose a unified concept of noise, this chapter examines the complexity of noise and the fluctuating indeterminacy of its conceptualization through different registers of analysis—music, semiotics, literary, philosophical, cultural, historical—for the purpose of mapping conceptual transformations without arriving at a definitive concept called “noise.” The range of aspects and authors covered in this chapter—including musical examples such as Joy Division, Roland Barthes and Michel …Read more
  •  42
    Georg Simmel’s The Philosophy of Money is a unique philosophical attempt to understand the complex ways in which money shapes modern social existence. In this seminal work, Simmel seeks to understand the social and psychological conditions of possibility for money while at the same time arguing that the pervasive monetization of valuation in turn conditions modern life. This chapter explores Simmel’s rich analysis of money as fundamentally a social interaction; the relation between desire, valua…Read more
  •  64
    Encyclopedia of Phenomenology (edited book)
    Springer. 2025.
  •  85
    New Phenomenological Studies in Japan (edited book)
    Springer Verlag. 2019.
    The development of phenomenological philosophy in Japan is a well-established tradition that reaches back to the early 20th-century. The past decades have witnessed significant contributions and advances in different areas of phenomenological thought in Japan that remain unknown, or only partially known, to an international philosophical public. This volume offers a selection of original phenomenological research in Japan to an international audience in the form of an English language publicatio…Read more
  •  81
    The Darkest of Secrets
    Philosophica: International Journal for the History of Philosophy 32 (2): 147-167. 2024.
    In this paper, I propose an exploration of the question of trash and garbage, of what, in other words, we unthinkingly throw away and discard, individual and collectively. What is this thing called trash and garbage? What phenomenological resources—where I understand phenomenology as centered on an analysis of the “look” of things (their visibility and invisibility) and on how we speak about things (or fail to speak, the silences)—are available for learning how to question what is trash and garb…Read more
  •  62
    This volume explores the broad and rich spectrum of contemporary phenomenological engagement with digital technologies. By focusing on plural forms of the digital, it offers a robust and flexible framework for contemporary phenomenological investigations in the digital age. It contends that the impact of digital technologies on the lifeworld involves both the emergence of novel fields of lived experience in need of phenomenological analysis and the transformation of the method and attitude of ph…Read more
  •  39
    Torture and Trust in the World
    Phänomenologische Forschungen 2015 83-99. 2015.
  •  47
    The Intimacy of Disappearance
    In Gustav Strandberg & Hugo Strandberg (eds.), Jan Patočka and the Phenomenology of Life After Death, Springer Verlag. pp. 53-68. 2024.
    That the presence of others, after their death, continues to resonate within our own lives, that, in other words, death does not rob the other of their meaning for us, as if the meaning of their lives for us would suddenly become extinguished upon their death, is revealing of who we are, of how I am constituted in relation to others. The question of life after death is thus inseparable from the question of life before death, of what it is to have a life in concert, communication, and consort wit…Read more
  •  42
    In this chapter, I propose to examine a specific form of self-awareness in which we become aware of our existence in a problematic sense: wistfulness. In thinking about what it means to have a life, one is often haunted by different senses of possibility: of what could or should be, of what might have been, but just as well, of what could never have been. In such latter instances, we become aware of ourselves not in terms of actuality (who I am) or possibility (who I can or could become), but in…Read more
  •  129
    This book is the first extensive treatment of Husserl's phenomenology of time-consciousness. Nicolas de Warren uses detailed analysis of texts by Husserl, some only recently published in German, to examine Husserl's treatment of time-consciousness and its significance for his conception of subjectivity. He traces the development of Husserl's thinking on the problem of time from Franz Brentano's descriptive psychology, and situates it in the framework of his transcendental project as a whole. Par…Read more
  •  31
    Philosophers at the front: phenomenology and the First World War (edited book)
    Leuven University Press. 2017.
    An exceptional collection of letters, postcards, original writings, and photographs The First World War witnessed an unprecedented mobilization of philosophers and their families: as soldiers at the front; as public figures on the home front; as nurses in field hospitals; as mothers and wives; as sons and fathers. In Germany, the war irrupted in the midst of the rapid growth of Edmund Husserl's phenomenological movement – widely considered one of the most significant philosophical movements in t…Read more
  •  43
    The question of history in Jan Patočka's Heretical essays
    Metodo. International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 10 (2): 149-180. 2023.
  •  34
    Philosophy and Literature in Francophone Africa
    with Jean-Godefory Bidima
    In Kwasi Wiredu (ed.), A Companion to African Philosophy, Wiley-blackwell. 2007.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Relationship Between Philosophy and Literature Intersecting Themes.
  •  128
    Imagination and incarnation
    Methodos 9 1-16. 2009.
    Il n’est pas inhabituel de considérer l’imagination comme une conscience d’objets non réels, ayant la forme d’images internes ou de représentations privées de toute incarnation spatiale. Dans cet article j’interroge la phénoménologie de l’imagination de Husserl à partir de deux questions : l’imagination est-elle un type de conscience d’image? L’imagination, est-elle privée de toute incarnation spatiale? Après avoir reconstruit la distinction nette opérée par Husserl entre imagination et conscien…Read more
  •  17
    The aim of this paper is three-fold. First: to outline the characteristic features of a dynamic that works itself through and shapes the philosophical landscape in Germany during the 1920s and 1930s, and which Heidegger, in his own manner, channels and re-configures. Second: to explore the sense in which the “great war” for Heidegger as a spiritual conflict did not end in 1918. My argument here is that Heidegger internalizes this continuation of the war by other, philosophical means into his own…Read more
  •  69
    Flesh Made Paint
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 44 (1): 78-104. 2013.
  •  223
    The Apocalypse of Hope
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 27 (1): 25-59. 2006.
    “The apocalypse of hope” and other comparable flourishes in the writings of Frantz Fanon and Jean-Paul Sartre on political violence strike an alarming tone. In The Wretched of the Earth, Fanon advocates the way of revolutionary violence as the inevitable consequence of colonialism and its systematic exploitation of colonized natives. In his role of agent provocateur, Sartre’s preface to Fanon’s influential and controversial work characteristically dramatizes this redemptive promise of violence: …Read more
  •  174
    This paper distinguishes four senses of naturalism: reductive physicalism; a naturalism that departs from what Thompson calls “natural-historical judgments”; a naturalism that recognizes that physical nature is located within the space of reasons; and a phenomenological naturalism that shifts the focus to the “natural” experiences of subjects who encounter the world. The paper argues for a “phenomenological neo-Aristotelianism” that accounts both for the internal justification of our first-order…Read more