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232The Sublime AnthropoceneEnvironmental Philosophy 13 (2): 155-174. 2016.In the Anthropocene, humanity has been forced to a self-critical reflection on its place in the natural order. A neglected tool for understanding this is the sublime. Sublime experience opens us up to encounters with ‘formless’ nature at the same time as we recognize the inevitability of imprinting our purposes on nature. In other words, it is constituted by just the sort of self-critical stance towards our place in nature that I identify as the hallmark of the Anthropocene ‘collision’ between h…Read more
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71Humanism with a Human Face: Intimacy and the Enlightenment Howard B. Radest Westport, CT: Praeger, 1996, xi + 212 pp., $59.95 (review)Dialogue 37 (4): 849-. 1998.In The Devil and Secular Humanism Howard Radest explored the enlightenment roots of humanism; in this book he moves on humanism’s “personal and transcendental” features. As he sees it, contemporary humanism faces two enemies. There is, first, the “shadow enlightenment.” Radest describes this as that version of enlightenment principles with which humanists operate today, but which distorts the original meaning of those principles. Thus, for example, in place of the revolutionary idea of the moral…Read more
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75The Epistemic Problem of Cartesian PassionsInternational Philosophical Quarterly 43 (3): 309-332. 2003.For Descartes, the passions are the key to the good life. But he is also wary of the extent to which they may lead us astray. As I argue, there is reason to be skeptical that Descartes himself provides a satisfying resolution of this tension in the Passions of the Soul. The problem concerns our ability to interpret and work through intra-subjective passional conflicts. Descartes seems almost obsessed with the problem of such conflicts in this text. What he needs to provide, however, is a kind of…Read more
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115Moral progress and Canada's climate failureJournal of Global Ethics 7 (2). 2011.In a recent letter to Canada's national newspaper, The Globe and Mail, British columnist and climate change gadfly George Monbiot pleaded with Canada to clean up its greenhouse gas emissions act. The letter appeared just a week before the Copenhagen climate conference. In it, Monbiot alleged that Canada's newly acquired status as oil superpower threatens to ?brutalize? the country, as it has other oil-rich countries (Monbiot, G. 2009. Please, Canada, clean up your act, The Globe and Mail, Novemb…Read more
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113Environmental Ethics for Canadians (edited book)Oxford University Press Canada. 2015.Designed for second- and third-year university and college courses on environmental ethics or philosophy and the environment, Environmental Ethics for Canadians 2e is a comprehensive introduction to the core ethical questions shaping contemporary environmental debates
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6Andrew Cutrofello, The Owl at Dawn: A Sequel to Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit Reviewed byPhilosophy in Review 15 (6): 389-391. 1995.
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140Self-Deception and the Ethics of Belief: Locke’s Critique of EnthusiasmPhilo 5 (1): 62-83. 2002.Locke’s critique of enthusiastic religion is an attempt to undermine a form of supernaturalist belief. In this paper, I argue for a novel interpretation of that critique. By opening up a middle path between the views of John Passmore and Michael Ayers, I show that Locke is accusing the enthusiast of being a self-deceived believer. First, I demonstrate the manner in which a theory of self-deception squares with Locke’s intellectualist epistemology. Second, I argue that Locke thinks he can show th…Read more
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62Integrity and the virtues of reason: Living a convincing lifegreg scherkoske cambridge university press, 2013; V + 213 pp. $99.00 (review)Dialogue 53 (3): 577-579. 2014.
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |