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138Kant and the Leibnizian Conception of MindDissertation, Boston College. 2006.In what follows, I will detail Kant's criticism of the Leibnizian conception of mind as it is presented in key chapters of the Kritik der reinen Vernunft. Approaching Kant with such a focus goes against the current predominant in contemporary Kant scholarship. Kant's engagement with Leibniz in the KrV is often taken as limited to the refutation of the latter's relational theory of space and time in the Aesthetic and the general criticism presented in the Amphiboly chapter, inasmuch as Kant is ta…Read more
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1297Leibniz's Wolffian PsychologyIn Wenchao Li (ed.), Vorträge des X. Internationalen Leibniz-Kongress, vol. 2, G. Olms. 2016.In this paper, I attempt to trace the broader contours of a putative Leibnizian psychology by adopting the rather unusual, and perhaps historically dubious, strategy of outlining the continuities between Leibniz’s discussion of the soul and the much more detailed and systematic psychological writings of his German successor, Christian Wolff.
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502Spontaneity before the Critical Turn: Crusius, Tetens, and the Pre-Critical Kant on the Spontaneity of the MindJournal of the History of Philosophy 54 (4): 625-648. 2016.Kant’s introduction in the Kritik der reinen Vernunft (KrV) of a spontaneity proper to the understanding is often thought to be one of the central innovations of his Critical philosophy. As I show in this paper, however, a number of thinkers within the 18th century German tradition in the time before the KrV (including the pre-Critical Kant himself) had already developed a robust conception of the spontaneity of the mind, a conception which, in many respects lays the groundwork for Kant’s later,…Read more
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96Review: Guyer, Paul (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Kant's Critique of Pure Reason (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2011 (1). 2011.
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100Descartes and Leibniz on the Concept of Substance and the Possibility of MetaphysicsIn Nathan Smith & Jason Taylor (eds.), Descartes and Cartesianism, Cambridge Scholars Press. 2005.
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2438Early Modern German Philosophy (1690-1750)Oxford University Press. 2019.Early Modern German Philosophy (1690-1750) makes some of the key texts of early German thought available in English, in most cases for the first time. The translations range from texts by the most important figures of the period, including Christian Thomasius, Christian Wolff, Christian August Crusius, and Georg Friedrich Meier, as well as texts by consequential but less familiar thinkers such as Dorothea Christiane Erxleben, Theodor Ludwig Lau, Friedrich Wilhelm Stosch, and Joachim Lange. The t…Read more
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159Morning Hours, or Lectures on God's ExistenceSpringer. 2011.Morning Hours is the first English translation of Morgenstunden by Moses Mendelssohn, the foremost Jewish thinker of the German Enlightenment. Published six months before Mendelssohn's death on January 4, 1786, Morning Hours is the most sustained presentation of his mature epistemological and metaphysical views, all elaborated in the service of presenting his son with proofs for the existence of God. But Morning Hours is much more than a theoretical treatise. It also plays a central role in t…Read more
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394The divorce of reason and experience: Kant's paralogisms of pure reason in contextJournal of the History of Philosophy 47 (2). 2009.I consider Kant's criticism of rational psychology in the Paralogisms of Pure Reason in light of his German predecessors. I first present Wolff's foundational account of metaphysical psychology with the result that Wolff's rational psychology is not comfortably characterized as a naïvely rationalist psychology. I then turn to the reception of Wolff's account among later German metaphysicians, and show that the same claim of a dependence of rational upon empirical psychology is found in the publi…Read more
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1498Power, Harmony, and Freedom: Debating Causation in 18th Century GermanyIn Corey W. Dyck, Frederick Beiser & Brandon Look (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of German Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century, Oxford University Press. forthcoming.As far as treatments of causation are concerned, the pre-Kantian 18th century German context has long been dismissed as a period of uniform and unrepentant Leibnizian dogmatism. While there is no question that discussions of issues relating to causation in this period inevitably took Leibniz as their point of departure, it is certainly not the case that the resulting positions were in most cases dogmatically, or in some cases even recognizably, Leibnizian. Instead, German theorists explored a ra…Read more
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216The subjective deduction and the search for a fundamental forceKant Studien 99 (2): 152-179. 2008.In this paper, I claim that Kant’s subjective deduction in the first edition of the KrV is to be understood in terms of an investigation of the fundamental force(s) (Grundkraft) of the soul, an investigation essential to Wolffian psychology and much debated throughout Germany in the second half of the 1700’s. I argue that the subjective deduction is indeed presented by means of the exposition of the three-fold syntheses but only insofar as these syntheses are employed as pointers towards each of…Read more
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142Review: Stapleford, Scott, Kant's Transcendental Arguments: Disciplining Pure Reason (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (4). 2009.
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2039Empirical consciousness explained: Self-affection, (self-)consciousness and perception in the B deductionKantian Review 11 29-54. 2006.Few of Kant’s doctrines are as difficult to understand as that of self-affection. Its brief career in the published literature consists principally in its unheralded introduction in the Transcendental Aesthetic and unexpected re-appearance at a key moment in the Deduction chapter in the B edition of the first Critique. Kant’s commentators, confronted with the difficulty of this doctrine, have naturally resorted to various strategies of clarification, ranging from distinguishing between empirical…Read more
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1341The Priority of Judging: Kant on Wolff's General LogicEstudos Kantianos 4 (2): 99-118. 2016.In this paper, I consider the basis for Kant's praise of Wolff's general logic as "the best we have." I argue that Wolff's logic was highly esteemed by Kant on account of its novel analysis of the three operations of the mind (tres operationes mentis), in the course of which Wolff formulates an argument for the priority of the understanding's activity of judging.
London, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Specialization
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
| Immanuel Kant |
| 17th/18th Century German Philosophy |
| Moses Mendelssohn |
| Christian Wolff |
Areas of Interest
| 17th/18th Century German Philosophy |
| Immanuel Kant |
| Moses Mendelssohn |
| Christian Wolff |