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1423Heidegger’s Distinction between Scientific and Philosophical JudgmentsPhilosophy Today 51 (Supplement): 33-41. 2007.Some commentators, such as Jürgen Habermas, think Martin Heidegger is guilty of a performative contradiction, because he uses judgments to situate judgments in a non-judicative context. This paper defends Heidegger by distinguishing two senses of judgment in his thought. Temporality enables two different directions of inquiry and hence two kinds of judgment. Scientific judgments arise when we turn from the temporal horizon toward entities alone; phenomenological judgments arise when we return…Read more
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2721Perceiving Other Animate Minds in AugustineAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 90 (1): 25-48. 2016.This paper dispels the Cartesian reading of Augustine’s treatment of mind and other minds by examining key passages from De Trinitate and De Civitate Dei. While Augustine does vigorously argue that mind is indubitable and immaterial, he disavows the fundamental thesis of the dualistic tradition: the separation of invisible spirit and visible body. The immediate self-awareness of mind includes awareness of life, that is, of animating a body. Each of us animates our own body; seeing other animated…Read more
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2381The Personal Significance of Sexual ReproductionThe Thomist 79 615-639. 2015.This paper reconnects the personal and the biological by extending the reach of parental causality. First, it argues that the reproductive act is profitably understood in personal terms as an “invitation” to new life and that the egg and sperm are “ambassadors” or “delegates,” because they represent the potential mother and father and are naturally endowed with causal powers to bring about motherhood and fatherhood, two of the most significant roles a person may have. Second, it argues that ev…Read more
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2176Absent to Those Present: The Conflict between Connectivity and CommunionIn Frank Scalambrino (ed.), Social Epistemology and Technology: Toward Public Self-Awareness Regarding Technological Mediation, Rowman & Littlefield International. pp. 167-176. 2015.The Presocratic philosopher Heraclitus quoted an ancient Greek proverb, “Absent while present.” This paper argues that social technology, which makes us present to those absent, also makes us absent to those present. That is, technology connects our attentions to our virtual community of friends but in doing so it disconnects our attentions from those about us. Because we are finite beings, who dwell wherever our attentions reside, there is a real conflict between the connectivity of social tech…Read more
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1861Unmasking the PersonInternational Philosophical Quarterly 50 (4): 447-460. 2010.By showing how the person appears, this paper calls into question the Cartesian prejudice that restricts appearance to objects. The paper recapitulates the origin of the term “person,” which originally designated the masks and characters donned by actors and only subsequently came to designate each particular human being. By concealing a face, the mask establishes a character who speaks with words of his own. The mask points to the face and to speech as ways the person appears. It belongs to the…Read more
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140Heidegger on overcoming rationalism through transcendental philosophyContinental Philosophy Review 41 (1): 17-41. 2007.Modernity is not only the culmination of the “oblivion of being,” for it also provides, in the form of transcendental thinking, a way to recover the original relation of thought to being. Heidegger develops this account through several lecture courses from 1935–1937, especially the 1935–1936 lecture course on Kant, and the account receives a kind of completion in the 1936–1938 manuscript, Contributions to Philosophy. Kant limits the dominance of rationalistic prejudices by reconnecting thought t…Read more
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138Marcel and Heidegger on the Proper Matter and Manner of ThinkingPhilosophy Today 48 (1): 94-109. 2004.Both Gabriel Marcel and Martin Heidegger hold that the proper task of philosophy is to think mystery. This is not the unknown as such; rather it is what ever again gives rise to thought. For both philosophers, representational thinking is inadequate to this subject matter. The present study explicates their attempts to approach mystery and identifies their final difference. For Marcel, the domain of mystery is opened in interpersonal presence; for Heidegger, mystery is opened in the appropri…Read more
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153Teleology, Purpose, and Power in NietzscheAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 84 (2): 413-426. 2010.Nietzsche subjects traditional philosophical causality to a skeptical critique. With the moderns, he rejects form as superficial. Against the moderns, he findsphysical laws and their ground in a free consciousness equally superficial, and he thinks that the principle of utility is ultimately life denying. However, Nietzscheis not a skeptic, and he has his own doctrine of causality centered on the noble power of the philosopher. The philosopher has the ability to impose new purposes, and this pow…Read more
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2627Augustinian Elements in Heidegger’s Philosophical AnthropologyProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 78 263-275. 2004.Heidegger’s 1921 lecture course, “Augustine and Neo-Platonism,” shows the emergence of certain Augustinian elements in Heidegger’s account of the humanbeing. In Book X of Augustine’s Confessions, Heidegger finds a rich account of the historicity and facticity of human existence. He interprets Augustinianmolestia (facticity) by exhibiting the complex relation of curare (the fundamental character of factical life) and the three forms of tentatio (possibilities of falling).In this analysis, molesti…Read more
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3789Heidegger and the Human DifferenceJournal of the American Philosophical Association 1 (1): 175-193. 2015.This paper provides a qualified defense of Martin Heidegger’s controversial assertion that humans and animals differ in kind, not just degree. He has good reasons to defend the human difference, and his thesis is compatible with the evolution of humans from other animals. He argues that the human environment is the world of meaning and truth, an environment which peculiarly makes possible truthful activities such as biology. But the ability to be open to truth cannot be a feature of human bio…Read more
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39Heidegger’s Shadow: Kant, Husserl, and the Transcendental TurnRoutledge. 2017._Heidegger’s Shadow_ is an important contribution to the understanding of Heidegger’s ambivalent relation to transcendental philosophy. Its contention is that Heidegger recognizes the importance of transcendental philosophy as the necessary point of entry to his thought, but he nonetheless comes to regard it as something that he must strive to overcome even though he knows such an attempt can never succeed. Engelland thoroughly engages with major texts such as _Kant and the Problem of Metaphysic…Read more
Irving, Texas, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
2 more
| Phenomenology |
| Metaphysics |
| Philosophy of Religion |
| Philosophy of Language |
| Human Nature |
| Continental Philosophy |
| History of Western Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
3 more
| Martin Heidegger |
| Edmund Husserl |
| Ludwig Wittgenstein |
| Thomas Aquinas |
| Anselm |
| Augustine |
| Aristotle |
| Plato |