• PhilPapers
  • PhilPeople
  • PhilArchive
  • PhilEvents
  • PhilJobs
  • Sign in
PhilPeople
 
  • Sign in
  • News Feed
  • Find Philosophers
  • Departments
  • Radar
  • Help
 
profile-cover
Drag to reposition
profile picture

Warren G. Frisina

Hofstra University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    36
    • Most Recent
    • Most Downloaded
    • Topics
  •  News and Updates
    11
  •  Philosophical Views

 More details
  • Hofstra University
    Administrator
Hempstead, New York, United States of America
  • All publications (36)
  •  87
    Response to Yang Xiaomei
    Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 8 (3): 327-331. 2009.
  •  46
    Knowledge as Active, Aesthetic, and Hypothetical: A Pragmatic Interpretation of Whitehead's Cosmology
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 5 (1). 1991.
    Continental Philosophy
  •  53
    Metaphysics and moral metaphysics
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 13 (3): 311-328. 1986.
    Chinese Philosophy: Metaphysics and Epistemology
  •  15
    Pragmatism, Neo-Pragmatism, and Religion
    Lang. 1997.
    Richard Rorty
  •  124
    Are knowledge and action really one thing?: A study of Wang yang-ming's doctrine of mind
    Philosophy East and West 39 (4): 419-447. 1989.
    Asian PhilosophySong-Ming Neo-Confucianism
  •  49
    Thinking Through Hall and Ames: On the Art of Comparative Philosophy
    Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 15 (4): 563-574. 2016.
    With the publication of their first collaborative book Thinking Through Confucius, David Hall and Roger Ames launched a comparative philosophical project juxtaposing American pragmatism and Chinese Confucianism. This essay focuses on the role pragmatic assumptions play in Hall’s and Ames’s announced goal of opening a “new route” into Chinese intellectual history. Hall and Ames aim to teach scholars whose scholarly sensibilities have been formed in the West what they must acknowledge about their …Read more
    With the publication of their first collaborative book Thinking Through Confucius, David Hall and Roger Ames launched a comparative philosophical project juxtaposing American pragmatism and Chinese Confucianism. This essay focuses on the role pragmatic assumptions play in Hall’s and Ames’s announced goal of opening a “new route” into Chinese intellectual history. Hall and Ames aim to teach scholars whose scholarly sensibilities have been formed in the West what they must acknowledge about their own traditions before they can engage Chinese thinkers constructively. After happily acknowledging my own debt to Hall and Ames and defending as hugely helpful the broad arc of their work, this essay raises questions about the way they deploy pragmatic assumptions as tools for “removing the useless lumber” that they claim “block” Western thinkers’ access to Chinese intellectual history. Specifically it argues that the “useless lumber” metaphor is misplaced.
    Chinese Philosophy: TopicsConfucius
  • Prev.
  • 1
  • 2
  • Next
PhilPeople logo

On this site

  • Find a philosopher
  • Find a department
  • The Radar
  • Index of professional philosophers
  • Index of departments
  • Help
  • Acknowledgments
  • Careers
  • Contact us
  • Terms and conditions

Brought to you by

  • The PhilPapers Foundation
  • The American Philosophical Association
  • Centre for Digital Philosophy, Western University
PhilPeople is currently in Beta Sponsored by the PhilPapers Foundation and the American Philosophical Association
Feedback