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Paul C. Taylor

Vanderbilt University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    39
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 More details
  • Vanderbilt University
    Department of Philosophy
    W. Alton Jones Professor of Philosophy
Rutgers - New Brunswick
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1997
Homepage
University Park, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Aesthetics
Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality
African/Africana Philosophy
Philosophy of Action
Areas of Interest
Social and Political Philosophy
19th Century Philosophy
20th Century Philosophy
Philosophy of the Americas
Metaphilosophy
Philosophy of Action
Philosophy of Mind
Aesthetics
3 more
  • All publications (39)
  •  43
    Race problems, unknown publics, paralysis, and faith
    In Shannon Sullivan & Nancy Tuana (eds.), Race and Epistemologies of Ignorance, State Univ of New York Pr. pp. 135--151. 2007.
    Race and Science
  •  296
    Malcolm's conk and Danto's colors; or, four logical petitions concerning race, beauty, and aesthetics
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (1): 16-20. 1999.
    Philosophy of RaceAestheticsRace and Science
  •  394
    Appiah’s Uncompleted Argument
    Social Theory and Practice 26 (1): 103-128. 2000.
    African-American PhilosophyConceptions of RacePolitical Theory
  •  93
    The Philosophy of Race. by Albert Atkin. Acumen, 2012, pp. 200, £15.99. ISBN-10: 1844655156 (review)
    Philosophy 89 (1): 166-171. 2014.
    African-American PhilosophyConceptions of Race
  • Reconstructing Aesthetics: John Dewey, Expression Theory, and Cultural Criticism
    Dissertation, Rutgers the State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick. 1997.
    Contemporary analytic aestheticians have little interest in the old paradigm of expression theory. They observe that expression theorists tend to locate the essence of art in the externalization of emotion, and they argue persuasively that this tendency is unfortunate. Then they consign expression theorists like Dewey; Collingwood, and Croce to the dustbin of history. This dismissive posture has become standard in aesthetics, for some good reasons. But at least in the case of Dewey, the reasons …Read more
    Contemporary analytic aestheticians have little interest in the old paradigm of expression theory. They observe that expression theorists tend to locate the essence of art in the externalization of emotion, and they argue persuasively that this tendency is unfortunate. Then they consign expression theorists like Dewey; Collingwood, and Croce to the dustbin of history. This dismissive posture has become standard in aesthetics, for some good reasons. But at least in the case of Dewey, the reasons don't apply. The burden of my dissertation is to make a case for this claim. ;While Dewey does help himself to the vocabulary of expressionism in Art as Experience, he uses it to make arguments less appropriate to a fin-de-siecle expression theorist than to a contemporary cultural critic. He never claims that art is essentially the expression of emotion; he doesn't even agree that emotion is what's expressed in art. His account of expression in art is about the production and reproduction of culture by means of individual agency. It is what Charles Taylor calls expressivism, not expressionism. ;My interpretation of Dewey's aesthetics diverges radically from the one in Alan Tormey's The Concept of Expression, which has become a kind of controlling precedent for the analytic approach to expressionism. I avoid and reject Tormey's reading by locating Dewey's musings on expression in the broader contexts of his conception of the aesthetic, his pragmatist philosophical system, and the tradition of expressivist thought that includes Hamann, Herder, Hegel and Marx. Proceeding in this way not only reveals certain motivations and themes that would otherwise remain obscure, but also highlights certain insights that point toward new, more culturally grounded modes of aesthetic theorizing. I try to recover Dewey's work as a step toward this new aesthetics, an approach that I call, following Cornel West, prophetic aesthetics
  •  112
    Evading evasion, recovering recovery
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 25 (2): 174-183. 2011.
    In his contribution to Cheryl Misak's New Pragmatists volume, David Bakhurst considers the "prospect of a fruitful alliance between [ethical] particularism and pragmatism." 1 In an attempt to show that members of the two camps can "profit from critical engagement with each other's works" (124), he considers how pragmatists might help resolve three outstanding problems for ethical particularists. Unfortunately, his generosity outpaces his imagination, and he does not really find a great deal that…Read more
    In his contribution to Cheryl Misak's New Pragmatists volume, David Bakhurst considers the "prospect of a fruitful alliance between [ethical] particularism and pragmatism." 1 In an attempt to show that members of the two camps can "profit from critical engagement with each other's works" (124), he considers how pragmatists might help resolve three outstanding problems for ethical particularists. Unfortunately, his generosity outpaces his imagination, and he does not really find a great deal that pragmatists can contribute. So Bakhurst's potential alliance ends up being a case of convergent evolution. He finds that he and his fellow particularists now occupy positions—positions against, among other ..
    Continental Philosophy
  •  167
    What's the Use of Calling Du Bois a Pragmatist?
    Metaphilosophy 35 (1-2): 99-114. 2004.
    Was W. E. B. Du Bois a pragmatist? Does it matter? This essay argues that reading Du Bois as a pragmatist highlights aspects of his work and life that might otherwise go unnoticed, while also highlighting aspects of pragmatism that often go unappreciated. In addition, this double revelation may help restore to us some important resources for dealing with current social problems.
    Critical Race Theory
  •  563
    The Two-Dewey Thesis, Continued: Shusterman's Pragmatist Aesthetics
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 16 (1). 2002.
    Continental PhilosophyAestheticsJohn DeweyAesthetic ExperienceMichel Foucault
  •  6
    Silence and sympathy: Dewey's whiteness
    In George Yancy (ed.), What White Looks Like: African-American Philosophers on the Whiteness Question, Routledge. 2004.
    Empathy and SympathyRacial IdentityCritical Race TheoryColor Blindness and Color ConsciousnessJohn D…Read more
    Empathy and SympathyRacial IdentityCritical Race TheoryColor Blindness and Color ConsciousnessJohn DeweyWhiteness
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