•  18
    Capitalism, Colonialism, and the War on Human Life
    Historical Materialism 27 (1): 253-268. 2019.
    Dussel’s complex work calls into question the standard history of philosophy, reveals a counter-history at work beneath the official history that gives voice to the victims of capitalism and colonialism, and systematically develops a novel ‘material ethics’ grounded in an unqualified, universal affirmation of life as the foundation of liberatory values. The Ethics of Liberation brings together the major problems explored in Dussel’s prolific body of earlier work: the relationship between Western…Read more
  •  17
    Life-Value vs Money-Value: Capitalism’s Fatal Category Mistake
    The European Legacy 24 (3-4): 437-445. 2019.
    Volume 24, Issue 3-4, May - June 2019, Page 437-445.
  •  16
    Well-Being: Happiness in a Worthwhile Life
    Journal of Critical Realism 15 (3): 305-309. 2016.
  •  16
  •  16
    The Troubles With Democracy
    Rowman Littlefield International. 2019.
    Providing a new philosophical foundation for thinking about old problems such as class inequality, this concise and accessible book explores the concept of and problems associated with democracy. Ideal for students in politics and philosophy, the book informs new structural and institutional responses to these problems.
  •  15
    Marx is famous for apparently dismissing the practical role of philosophy. Yet, as accumulating empirical knowledge of growing life-crises proves, the simply availability of facts is insufficient to motivate struggles for fundamental change. So too manifest social crisis. The economic crisis which began in 2008 has indeed motivated social struggles, but nothing on the order of the revolutionary struggles Marx expected. Rather than make Marx irrelevant, however, the absence of global struggles fo…Read more
  •  15
    The paper argues that the future of socialism depends upon the category of use value being grounded in a wider and deeper conception of life value. Only as such can it serve as the regulating principle of a future democratic socialist society. Life value is anchored in an understanding of the human life's space-time continuum understood as a continuum of life requirements. The multiple life crises regularly generated by capitalism are crises of its incapacity to adequately satisfy these life req…Read more
  •  14
    Art and Posthistory: Conversations on the End of Aesthetics (review)
    The European Legacy 28 (5): 547-548. 2023.
    This short collection of conversations between the renowned American philosopher of art Arthur C. Danto and Italian art critic Demetrio Paparoni will serve as an effective introduction to Danto’s w...
  •  14
    To the extent that classical, neoclassical, and Marxist political economy have traditionally ignored the problem of economic scale and valorized economic growth, all three have much to learn from ecological economics. Its most important contribution is the argument that the human economy is a subsystem of the finite earth’s natural life-support system. Implied in this argument is a new metric of economic health, the life-value rather than the money-value of that which economies produce and distr…Read more
  •  14
    Since its publication in 1971, John Rawls’ A Theory of Justice has defined the terrain of political philosophical debate concerning the principles, scope, and material implications of social justice. Social justice for Rawls concerns the principles that govern the operation of major social institutions. Major social institutions structure the lives of citizens by regulating access to the resources and opportunities that the formulation and realization of human projects require. Rawls’ theory of …Read more
  •  14
    Death, Life; War, Peace
    Philosophy Today 48 (2): 168-178. 2004.
  •  13
    The Human and the Inhuman
    International Studies in Philosophy 28 (1): 61-72. 1996.
  •  13
    On Marxist Ethics
    Journal of Critical Realism 15 (2): 187-200. 2016.
    A new collection of essays edited by Michael J. Thompson aims to explicate and defend the humanist values which, according to the authors, were the core of Marx's critique of capitalist society. The text does not aim to provide a political roadmap to building an alternative society in which those values could be realized but rather philosophical analysis of the meaning and implications of those values. While there are sometimes tensions between the philosophical arguments developed in the variou…Read more
  •  13
    Embodiment and the Meaning of Life
    Mcgill-Queen's University Press. 2018.
    The long tradition of pessimism in philosophy and poetry notoriously laments suffering caused by vulnerabilities of the human body. The most familiar and contemporary version is antinatalism, the view that it is wrong to bring sentient life into existence because birth inevitably produces suffering. Technotopianism, which stems from a similarly negative view of embodied limitations, claims that we should escape sickness and death through radical human-enhancement technologies. In Embodiment and …Read more
  •  11
    Philosophy in a Fragmented World
    International Studies in Philosophy 29 (1): 99-109. 1997.
  •  11
    Joseph Brodsky and the Aesthetic Origins of Ethics
    The European Legacy 28 (8): 837-851. 2023.
    In his Nobel Prize acceptance speech in 1987, the Russian-born American poet Joseph Brodsky argued that aesthetics is the mother of ethics. However, there is an ambiguity in his use of the term aesthetics. In the first part of this article, I distinguish between Brodsky’s narrow use of aesthetics, which refers to problems of beauty, and the broader sense, which refers to the cognitive function of sensibility and feeling. I then suggest that good sense can be made of the claim about the origins o…Read more
  •  10
    Marx’s Creative Legacies
    The European Legacy 25 (2): 217-224. 2019.
    Volume 25, Issue 2, February - March 2020, Page 217-224.
  •  10
    The Fair Society: The Science of Human Nature and the Pursuit of Social Justice (review)
    Journal of Critical Realism 12 (3): 410-412. 2013.
  •  9
    Book reviews (review)
    with Peter Groves, Thomas Anderson, Richard Sheldon, Frederick M. Schweitzer, Cynthia Patterson, Jutta Birmele, J. H. Reid, Gary K. Browning, John Morrow, John Peacock, Donna Landry, Anne E. Brownlow, Tim Harris, Richard G. Hodgson, Brigitte Glaser, David W. Lovell, Gary Kates, Marilyn J. Boxer, Nikolina Sretenova, Jennifer Johnston, James L. Boren, Richard S. Findler, Gerard Delanty, Fabienne‐Sophie Chauderlot, Edna Hindie Lemay, Stephen George, Albert Rabil, Lee C. Rice, Augustinus P. Dierick, Eleanor Ty, Michael James, David A. Warner, Michele Frucht Levy, John Gascoigne, Fredric S. Zuckerman, Janine Maltz Perron, Hans Derks, Marcel Cornis‐Pope, Brayton Polka, Nancy Hudson‐Rodd, Joseph Femia, Mike Hawkins, Maurice Larkin, Kevin J. Hayes, Gabriel P. Weisberg, Louise A. Tilly, Gerald Seaman, Graeme Gill, Manfred B. Steger, Jonathan S. Myerov, Laurie M. Johnson Bagby, and Julius R. Ruff
    The European Legacy 2 (6): 1040-1108. 1997.
    The World on Paper. By David R. Olson xix + 319 pp. £17.95/$24.95 cloth. Milton and the Revolutionary Reader. By Sharon Achinstein xv + 272 pp. £27.50/$35.00 cloth. The Rise of Christianity: A Sociologist Reconsiders History. By Rodney Stark xiv + 246 pp. £16.95/$24.95 cloth. The Idea of Luxury: A Conceptual and Historical Investigation. By Christopher J. Berry xiv + 271 pp. £45.00/$69.95 cloth, £17.95/$24.95 paper. Will to Live: One Family's Story of Surviving the Holocaust. By Adam Starkopf 24…Read more
  •  9
    Historical materialism as mediation between the physical and the meaningful
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (9): 1043-1059. 2020.
    The article argues that historical materialism is not only a theory of historical change but more generally a mediation between the natural foundations of human life and its meaningful symbolic expressions. The article begins with an interpretation of the general philosophical significance of the basic premises of historical materialism as they are sketched in the German Ideology. I argue that these premises point us in two different directions: down, towards a scientific understanding of the na…Read more
  •  9
    Volume 25, Issue 7-8, November - December 2020, Page 880-881.
  •  8
    Thinking and Talking (review)
    The European Legacy 28 (1): 114-115. 2022.
    Thinking and Talking is the fifth volume of the collected papers of Giorgio Baruchello. The volume gathers together nineteen pieces of various styles and lengths—some rewritten formal academic arti...
  •  8
    Materialist ethics and life-value
    McGill Queens university press. 2012.
    Current patterns of global economic activity are not only unsustainable, but unethical - this claim is central to Materialist Ethics and Life-Value. Grounding the definition of ethical value in the natural and social requirements of life-support and life-development shared by all human beings, Jeff Noonan provides a new way of understanding the universal conception of "the good life." Noonan argues that the true crisis affecting the world today is not sluggish rates of economic growth but the mo…Read more
  •  7
    Essays and Reviews, 1959–2002 (review)
    The European Legacy 22 (6): 748-750. 2017.
  •  7
    Death, life; war, peace
    Philosophy Today 48 (2): 168-178. 2004.
  •  7
    All varieties of socialism share this trait in common: they are systematic alternatives to capitalism. But why should a systematic alternative to capitalism be necessary? Has it not proven to be the most productive economic system in history? Has it not created social conditions in which the powers of human imagination, creativity, and scientific understanding have grown to wider scope than in any previous society? Has it not enabled human beings to extend their life span and live healthier and …Read more
  •  7
    Jeff Noonan traces the development of humanist values from the ancient philosophies of India, China, and Greece, to contemporary struggles against oppression. Embodied Humanism argues that humanism is a critical social philosophy in which need-satisfaction and life-enjoyment have always been paramount.
  •  6
    “The re-discovery of Marx,” Marcello Musto argues, “is based on his persistent capacity to explain the present: he remains an indispensible instrument for understanding it and transforming it.”. It is true that the continuity of problems connecting our world to Marx’s ensures the relevance of historical materialism. At the same time, changes in the structure and scale of capitalism, as well as failures of nineteenth and twentieth century socialism to build a democratic and life-affirming alterna…Read more