•  3414
    Greek Bronze: Holding a Mirror to Life
    Yearbook of the Irish Philosophical Society. 7 1-30. 2007.
    Explores the role of the thousands of life-size bronze statues "populating" Athens, Rhode, Olympia and other Greek cities. Applied phenomenological hermeneutics.
  •  108
    Nietzsche and the Philosophy of Scientific Power
    International Studies in Philosophy 22 (2): 79-92. 1990.
  •  11
    With his most famous question, the Being-question, the Seinsfrage — a question essentially and not incidentally obliterated by the tradition of philosophic questioning, Heidegger proposes a phenomenology of questioning. This is not counter to the project of philosophy but it calls us to our own experience as questioners, even as those who ask, who can ask 'Why the why.'(1) For Heidegger, 'only because man is in this way, can he and must he, in each case, say, not only yes or no, but essentially …Read more
  •  84
    Claude Lorraine and Raphael
    New Nietzsche Studies 5 (3-4): 181-193. 2003.
  •  53
    Lou and Sacro Monte
    New Nietzsche Studies 9 (3): 137-167. 2015.
  •  8
    In what follows, I seek to offer a Nietzschean complement to Jacques Taminiaux's reading of Heidegger's first lecture course on Nietzsche, The Will to Power as Art. Because what Taminiaux calls Heidegger's "connivance" with Nietzsche reflects the engaged affinity of one thoughtstyle for another, from the explicit perspective of the first, Taminiaux's reading presumes without raising the question of relation between thinkers.
  •  58
    Heidegger on Verfallenheit
    Foundations of Science 22 (2): 261-264. 2017.
    The question of Heidegger’s reflections on technology is explored in terms of ‘living with’ technology and including the socio-theoretical notion of ‘entanglement’ towards a review of Heidegger’s understanding of technology and media, including the entertainment industry and modern digital life. I explore Heidegger’s reflections on Gelassenheit by way of the Japanese aesthetic conception of life and of art as wabi-sabi understood with respect to Heidegger’s Gelassenheit as the art of Verfallenhe…Read more
  •  70
  •  54
    The Philosopher and the Volcano
    Philosophy Today 55 (Supplement): 206-224. 2011.
  •  1879
    On Nietzsche, science, the oral tradition -- or the troubadours and ancient Greek music drama.
  •  90
    Nietzsche's Chaos Sive Natura: Evening Gold and the Dancing Star
    Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 57 (2): 225-245. 2001.
    Nietzsche's creative and fundamental account of chaos in both its cosmic, universal as well as its humane context, recalls the ancient Greek meaning of chaos rather than its modern, disordered, decadent significance. In this generatively primordial sense, chaos corresponds not to the watery nothingness of Semitic myth or modern, scientific entropy but creative, uncountenancedly abundant potency. And in such an archaic sense, Nietzsche's chaos is a word for both nature and art. Nietzsche's creati…Read more
  •  17
    At the extreme limit of suffering [ Leiden: pathos] nothing indeed remains but the conditions of time or space. At this moment, the man forgets himself because he is entirely within the moment; the God forgets himself because he is nothing but time; and both are unfaithful. Time because at such a moment it undergoes a categoric change and beginning and end simply no longer rhyme within it; man because, at this moment, he has to follow the categorical..
  •  127
    Ex aliquo nihil
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 84 (2): 231-255. 2010.
    This essay explores the nihilistic coincidence of the ascetic ideal and Nietzsche’s localization of science in the conceptual world of anarchic socialismas Nietzsche indicts the uncritical convictions of modern science by way of a critique of the causa sui, questioning both religion and the enlightenment as well asboth free and unfree will and condemning the “poor philology” enshrined in the language of the “laws” of nature. Reviewing the history of philosophical nihilismin the context of Nietzs…Read more
  •  765
    In a single aphorism in The Gay Science, Nietzsche arrays “The Problem of the Artist” in a reticulated constellation. Addressing every member of the excluded grouping of disenfranchised “others,” Nietzsche turns to the destitution of a god of love keyed to the selfturning absorption of the human heart. His ultimate and irrecusably tragic project to restore the innocence of becoming requires the affirmation of the problem of suffering as the task of learning how to love. Nietzsche sees the eros o…Read more
  •  63
    Reading Lou von Salomé’s Triangles
    New Nietzsche Studies 8 (3-4): 83-114. 2011.
  •  85
    Heidegger's 1950 claim to Jaspers (later repeated in his Spiegel interview), that his Nietzsche lectures represented a "resistance" to Nazism is premised on the understanding that he and Jaspers have of the place of science in the Western world. Thus Heidegger can emphasize Nietzsche's epistemology, parsing Nietzsche's will to power, contra Nazi readings, as the metaphysical culmination of the domination of the West by scientism and technologism. It is in this sense that Heidegger argues that Ge…Read more
  •  9
  •  108
    A Note on Nietzsche’s Chaos sive natura
    New Nietzsche Studies 5 (3-4): 48-70. 2003.
  •  2
    Nietzsche, Theories of Knowledge, and Critical Theory. Nietzsche and the Sciences, I et II
    with Robert Cohen
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 190 (3): 337-338. 2000.
  •  137
    _A philosophical exploration of the power that poetry, music, and the erotic have on us._.
  •  1360
    Heidegger & Nietzsche (edited book)
    with Alfred Denker and Holger Zaborowski
    BRILL. 2012.
    This volume contains new and original papers on Martin Heidegger’s complex relation to Friedrich Nietzsche’s philosophy. The authors not only critically discuss the many aspects of Heidegger’s reading of Nietzsche, they also interpret Heidegger’s thought from a Nietzschean perspective. Here is presented for the first time an overview of not only Heidegger’s and Nietzsche’s philosophy but also an overview of what is alive – and dead – in their thinking. Many authors through a reading of Heidegger…Read more
  •  107
  • Greek Bronze: On Sculptures, Mirrors, and Life
    Yearbook of the Irish Philosophical Society 1-30. 2006.
  •  179
    Towards a Critical Philosophy of Science: Continental Beginnings and Bugbears, Whigs, and Waterbears
    International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 24 (4): 343-391. 2010.
    Continental philosophy of science has developed alongside mainstream analytic philosophy of science. But where continental approaches are inclusive, analytic philosophies of science are not–excluding not merely Nietzsche’s philosophy of science but Gödel’s philosophy of physics. As a radicalization of Kant, Nietzsche’s critical philosophy of science puts science in question and Nietzsche’s critique of the methodological foundations of classical philology bears on science, particularly evolution …Read more
  •  3887
    Continental Philosophy of Science
    In Constantin Boundas (ed.), The Edinburgh Companion to the Twentieth Century Philosophies. Edinburgh, University of Edinburgh Press. pp. 545--558. 2007.
    Continental philosophies of science tend to exemplify holistic themes connecting order and contingency, questions and answers, writers and readers, speakers and hearers. Such philosophies of science also tend to feature a fundamental emphasis on the historical and cultural situatedness of discourse as significant; relevance of mutual attunement of speaker and hearer; necessity of pre-linguistic cognition based in human engagement with a common socio-cultural historical world; role of narrative a…Read more