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85Jaspers, Heidegger, and Arendt: On Politics, Science, and CommunicationExistenz 4 (1): 1-19. 2009.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
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9On the idea of continental and postmodern perspectives in the philosophy of scienceIn Babette E. Babich, Debra B. Bergoffen & Simon Glynn (eds.), Continental and postmodern perspectives in the philosophy of science, Avebury. pp. 1--7. 1995.
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1360Heidegger & Nietzsche (edited book)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
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2Nietzsche, Theories of Knowledge, and Critical Theory. Nietzsche and the Sciences, I et IIRevue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 190 (3): 337-338. 2000.
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137Words in Blood, Like Flowers: Philosophy and Poetry, Music and Eros in Holderlin, Nietzsche, and HeideggerState University of New York Press. 2007._A philosophical exploration of the power that poetry, music, and the erotic have on us._.
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Greek Bronze: On Sculptures, Mirrors, and LifeYearbook of the Irish Philosophical Society 1-30. 2006.
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69The Metaphor of Woman as Truth in Nietzsche: The Dogmatist's Reverse Logic or RückschlußJournal of Nietzsche Studies 12 27-39. 1996.
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179Towards a Critical Philosophy of Science: Continental Beginnings and Bugbears, Whigs, and WaterbearsInternational 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
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3887Continental Philosophy of ScienceIn 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
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80Le Zarathoustra de Nietzsche et le style parodique. À propos de l'hyperanthropos de Lucien et du surhomme de NietzscheDiogène 232 (4): 81-104. 2012.It is well-known that as a term, Nietzsche’s Übermensch derives from Lucian of Samosata’s hyperanthropos. I argue that Zarathustra’s teaching of the overman acquires new resonances by reflecting on the context of that origination from Lucian’s Kataplous – literally, “sailing into port” – referring to the soul’s journey, ferried by Charon, guided by Hermes, into the afterlife. The Kataplous he tyrannos, usually translated Downward Journey or The Tyrant, is a Menippean satire telling the tale of t…Read more
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26Philosophische Figuren, Frauen und Liebe. Zu Nietzsche und LouNietzscheforschung 19 (1): 113-139. 2012.
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132Adorno’s radio phenomenologyPhilosophy and Social Criticism 40 (10): 957-996. 2014.Adorno’s phenomenological study of radio offers a sociology of music in a political and cultural context. Situating that phenomenology in the context of Adorno’s philosophical background and the world political circumstances of Adorno’s collaboration with Paul Lazarsfeld on the Princeton Radio Project, illuminates both Adorno’s Current of Music and the Dialectic of Enlightenment with Max Horkheimer and the ‘Culture Industry’. Together with an analysis of popular music in social practice/culture,…Read more
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1235On Mitchell and on Glazebrook on βίοςIn Pol Vandevelde (ed.), Supplement to the 2011 Proceedings of the Heidegger Circle, . 2011.Commentary on Andrew Mitchell and Patricia Glazebrook on plants and agriculture in the context of Heidegger's own reflections on botany and technology in which I discuss, bees, cell phone radiation, the relatively complex but fairly obvious sociological dynamics of science and powerful commercial interests (capital), and mantid copulation.
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8650A discussion of Nietzsche's philology as the prelude to his philosophy of science.
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118"The Problem of Science" in Nietzsche and HeideggerRevista Portuguesa de Filosofia 63 (1/3): 205-237. 2007.Nietzsche and Heidegger pose important philosophical questions to science and its technological projects. The resultant contributes to what may be called a continental philosophy of science and the author argues that only such a rigorously critical approach to the question of science permits a genuinely philosophical reflection on science. More than a thoughtful reflection on science, however, the heart of philosophy is also at stake in such reflections. The author defends that if Nietzsche prop…Read more
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230From Fleck's denkstil to Kuhn's paradigm: Conceptual schemes and incommensurabilityInternational Studies in the Philosophy of Science 17 (1): 75-92. 2003.This article argues that the limited influence of Ludwik Fleck's ideas on philosophy of science is due not only to their indirect dissemination by way of Thomas Kuhn, but also to an incommensurability between the standard conceptual framework of history and philosophy of science and Fleck's own more integratedly historico-social and praxis-oriented approach to understanding the evolution of scientific discovery. What Kuhn named "paradigm" offers a periphrastic rendering or oblique translation of…Read more
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57radicalization of Kant 's critical project inverts or opposes traditional readings of Kant 's critical program. Nietzsche aligns both Kant and Schopenhauer with what he named the effectively, efficiently pathological optimism of the rationalist drive to knowledge, patterned on the Cyclopean eye of Socrates in The Birth of Tragedy. For the rest of Nietzsche's writerly life, the name of Socrates would serve both as a signifier for the historical personage marking the end of the "tragic age" of the…Read more
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79The Essence of Questioning After Technology: Tϵχνή as Constraint and the Saving PowerJournal of the British Society for Phenomenology 30 (1): 106-125. 1999.(1999). The Essence of Questioning After Technology: Tϵχνή as Constraint and the Saving Power. Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology: Vol. 30, No. 1, pp. 106-125.
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123Nietzsche’s “Artists’ Metaphysics” and Fink’s Ontological “World-Play”International Studies in Philosophy 37 (3): 163-180. 2005.
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Reflections on greek bronze and «the statue of humanity»: Heidegger’s aesthetic phenomenology and nietzsche’s agonistic politicsExistentia 17 (5-6): 423-472. 2007.
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116Continental and postmodern perspectives in the philosophy of science (edited book)Avebury. 1995.Examines the implications of recent continental epistemology challenging the relationship between traditional, analytic, continental and postmodern understandings of science, showing that the challenging circumstances of the scientific project are transforming the role and meaning of science in the modern/postmodern world.
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52Politics and Heidegger: Aristotle, Superman, and ŽižekTelos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2012 (161): 141-161. 2012.Excerpt“Philosophy is metaphysics”1—so Heidegger reminds us and goes on to explain what metaphysics does. As we recall his 1929 inaugural lecture, “What is Metaphysics?” the project of questioning/defining metaphysics is one he undertakes throughout his life, so that as we read in 1964: “Metaphysics thinks beings as a whole—the world, man, God—with respect to Being, with respect to the belonging together of beings in Being.”2 In addition to Descartes, and hence with implicit reference to Husserl…Read more
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120Adorno on Nihilism and Modern Science, Animals, and JewsSymposium 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
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