•  8
    What Ivan Illich regarded in his Medical Nemesis as the ‘expropriation of health’ takes place on the surfaces and in the spaces of the screens all around us, including our cell phones but also the patient monitors and (increasingly) the iPads that intervene between nurse and patient. To explore what Illich called the ‘age of the show’, this essay uses film examples, like Creed and the controversial documentary Vaxxed, and the television series Nurse Jackie. Rocky’s cancer in his last film (submi…Read more
  •  10
    By reading Kant on chemistry as a science, including his definition of science as such, this essay reviews Kant and the history of chemistry. Kant’s Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heavens is read in terms of contemporary axiomatic systems, via the astrophysicist Rudolf Kurth’s 1956 account, along with Nietzsche’s account of logic and causality. Nietzsche cites Kant’s theory in the context of a sustained discussion of Anaxagoras’ pre-Platonic cosmology. The paper includes reflections…Read more
  •  6
    Beginning with a reflection on ‘conceptual schemes’ and ‘very’ ideas and proceeding to examine different approaches to thinking philosophy of science not only with Kant but also between traditional analytic and hermeneutico-phenomenological approaches, this essay features a review of Kant’s 1755 solar nebular hypothesis and a reading of Nietzsche and Kant on cosmology along with a reflection on chemistry and the properties of cinnabar. Overall it is argued that a philosophy of science must be cr…Read more
  •  6
  •  17
    Who is Nietzsche’s Archilochus?
    In Theodore George & Charles Bambach (eds.), Philosophers and their Poets: Reflections on the Poetic Turn in Philosophy Since Kant, State University of New York. pp. 85-114. 2019.
  •  166
    This collection of reading and essays on the Standard of Taste offers a much needed resource for students and scholars of philosophical aesthetics, political reflection, value and judgments, economics, and art. The authors include experts in the philosophy of art, aesthetics, history of philosophy as well as the history of science. This much needed volume on David Hume will enrich scholars across all levels of university study and research.
  •  138
    Hermeneutic philosophies of social science offer an approach to the philosophy of social science foregrounding the human subject and including attention to history as well as a methodological reflection on the notion of reflection, including the intrusions of distortions and prejudice. Hermeneutic philosophies of social science offer an explicit orientation to and concern with the subject of the human and social sciences. Hermeneutic philosophies of the social science represented in the present …Read more
  •  28
    New Religion: Wang Guangyi, Apelles’ Line, And Political Theology
    Rivista di Estetica 88 (88): 133-164. 2025.
    As Warhol appropriated posters and prints already ‘ready-made’, Wang Guangyi ‘covers’ Andy Warhol. This essay discusses Warhol and death (Marilyn Monroe, James Dean), mirroring artist and viewer, along with a discussion of Arthur Danto on Warhol and on Duchamp’s ‘Fountain’ (or not Duchamp’s because Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven’s ‘Fountain’) and Wang Guangyi’s New Religion Prophecy. The painting contest between Apelles and Protogenes is read via Ernst Gombrich (and Alois Riegl) on color and depth…Read more
  •  26
    Sachverzeichnis
    with Rolando González Padilla, David Espinet, Holger Zaborowski, Daniela Vallega-Neu, Sylvaine Gourdain Castaing, Lucian Ionel, Alfred Denker, Simona Venezia, Charles Bambach, Aleš Novák, and Michael Medzech
    In Holger Zaborowski (ed.), Martin Heidegger: Holzwege, De Gruyter. pp. 237-240. 2024.
  •  17
    Personenverzeichnis
    with Rolando González Padilla, David Espinet, Holger Zaborowski, Daniela Vallega-Neu, Sylvaine Gourdain Castaing, Lucian Ionel, Alfred Denker, Simona Venezia, Charles Bambach, Aleš Novák, and Michael Medzech
    In Holger Zaborowski (ed.), Martin Heidegger: Holzwege, De Gruyter. pp. 235-236. 2024.
  •  27
    Hinweise zu den Autorinnen und Autoren
    with Rolando González Padilla, David Espinet, Holger Zaborowski, Daniela Vallega-Neu, Sylvaine Gourdain Castaing, Lucian Ionel, Alfred Denker, Simona Venezia, Charles Bambach, Aleš Novák, and Michael Medzech
    In Holger Zaborowski (ed.), Martin Heidegger: Holzwege, De Gruyter. pp. 233-234. 2024.
  •  25
    Auswahlbibliographie
    with Rolando González Padilla, David Espinet, Holger Zaborowski, Daniela Vallega-Neu, Sylvaine Gourdain Castaing, Lucian Ionel, Alfred Denker, Simona Venezia, Charles Bambach, Aleš Novák, and Michael Medzech
    In Holger Zaborowski (ed.), Martin Heidegger: Holzwege, De Gruyter. pp. 227-232. 2024.
  •  9
    Becoming and Purification
    In Vanessa Lemm (ed.), Nietzsche and the Becoming of Life, Fordham University Press. pp. 245-262. 2020.
  •  11
    Early continental philosophy of science
    In Alan D. Schrift (ed.), The History of Continental Philosophy, University of Chicago Press. pp. 959-982. 2019.
  •  8
    Vers une éthique de l’assistance
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 20 (1): 194-212. 2016.
    Si Nietzsche, se référant à la philosophie morale de Kant, put invoquer ceux « qui promettent sans en avoir les moyens » et dérider le « menteur qui trahit sa parole dans le moment même où il l’a sur les lèvres », un examen de l’éthique de l’assistance de Heidegger souligne, de son côté, que nous nous trouvons toujours déjà dans l’assistance envers les autres, même si ce n’est que de manière négative ou défectueuse. En parcourant le chemin qui nous mène vers l’éthique de l’assistance chez Heideg…Read more
  • Reading David B. Allison’s Reading the New Nietzsche
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 8 (1): 19-35. 2004.
  •  16
    Adorno on Nihilism and Modern Science, Animals, and Jews
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 15 (1): 110-145. 2011.
    Adorno, no less than Heidegger or Nietzsche, had his own critical notions of truth/untruth. But Adorno’s readers are unsettled by the barest hint of anything that might be taken to be antiscience. To protest scientism, yes and to be sure, but to protest “scientific thought,” decidedly not, and the distinction is to be maintained even if Adorno himself challenged it. For Adorno, so-called “scientistic” tendencies are the very “conditions of society and of scientific thought.” And again, Adorno’s …Read more
  •  18
    Commentary
    International Studies in Philosophy 24 (2): 71-76. 1992.
  •  80
    Günther Anders’s “Promethean Shame”
    The Harvard Review of Philosophy 31 75-97. 2024.
    Günther Anders’s philosophy of technology, particularly his complex notion of ‘Promethean shame,’ or technological ressentiment, may illuminate questions of surveillance and AI ethics. As a critical philosopher of technology, radically so, his emphasis on the negative or downside of technology distinguishes Anders’s thinking on technology from future-focused and mainstream technological messianism. Key to Anders’s notion of ‘Promethean shame’ was his observation that we adapt ourselves to our te…Read more
  •  50
    Tone: Hearing Nietzsche’s Dionysus-Dithyrambs
    New Nietzsche Studies 12 (1): 161-185. 2023.
  •  47
    Reading Feyerabend between Philosophy of Science, Hermeneutics – and God
    Epistemology and Philosophy of Science 61 (3): 120-140. 2024.
    This essay seeks to make the case for reading hermeneutic philosophy of science with Feyerabend. In addition, there is the question of science, as Nietzsche raises this question along with Feyerabend’s programmatic recommendations for traditional philosophy of science. Including a discussion of method in history as in theology and philology, including Nietzsche’s hermeneutics, this essay reviews Feyerabend’s exchanges with Lakatos along with the resistance of mainstream philosophy of science to …Read more
  •  39
    Smells and politics of Utopia – Corrigendum
    Diogenes 65 (4): 593-593. 2024.