•  29
    Heidegger, Coping, and Cognitive Science (edited book)
    MIT Press. 2000.
    The essays in this volume reflect this desire to "make a difference"—not just in the world of academic philosophy, but in the broader world.
  •  23
    Walter Benjamin’s 1936 essay, ‘The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction’, constitutes one of the earliest reflections on the way in which the cultural experience and interpretation is transformed by the advent of what were then the ‘new’ media technologies of photography and film. Benjamin directs attention to the way in which these technologies release cultural objects from their unique presence in a place and make them uniformly available irrespective of spatial location. The way …Read more
  •  117
    Place and Experience: A Philosophical Topography
    Cambridge University Press. 1999.
    While the 'sense of place' is a familiar theme in poetry and art, philosophers have generally given little or no attention to place and the human relation to place. In Place and Experience, Jeff Malpas seeks to remedy this by advancing an account of the nature and significance of place as a complex but unitary structure that encompasses self and other, space and time, subjectivity and objectivity. Drawing on a range of sources from Proust and Wordsworth to Davidson, Strawson and Heidegger, he ar…Read more
  •  55
    Unity, Locality and Agency
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 58 (3): 627-633. 1998.
  •  70
    Martin Heidegger
    In Robert C. Solomon & David Sherman (eds.), The Blackwell Guide to Continental Philosophy, Blackwell. 2003.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Heidegger's Life Philosophical Development The Question of Being The Meaning of Being: Being and Time Truth and Place: The Later Writings Nazism and the University: Heidegger's Politics.
  •  17
    For anyone interested in the place of spatiality in Heidegger’s thinking, one of the key problems presented by Being and Time is Heidegger’s attempt, in §70, ‘to derive existential spatiality from temporality’1 – an attempt he himself referred to as ‘untenable’.2 This attempt turns out to not to be merely peripheral to Heidegger’s overall analysis, but is instead tied to certain central and problematic features in the argument of Being and Time, including its treatment of spatial and topographic…Read more
  •  58
    The commonplace image of Heidegger is of a philosopher firmly rooted, not in the city of Freiburg in which much of his life was spent, but in the Alemannic-Schwabian countryside around the village of Messkirch in which he was born. It would seem that the distance between Heidegger and Benjamin, between Messkirch and Berlin or Paris could not be greater. But to what extent are Heidegger's own personal predilections for the provincial and the bauerlich actually tied to the philosophical positions …Read more
  •  44
    The fragility of robust realism: A reply to Dreyfus and Spinosa
    Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 42 (1). 1999.
    Hubert Dreyfus and Charles Spinosa's argument for 'robust' realism centres on the possibility of our having access to things as they are in themselves and so as having access to things in a way that is not dependent on our 'quotidian concerns or sensory capacities'. Dreyfus and Spinosa claim that our everyday access to things is incapable of providing access of this kind, since our everyday access is holistically enmeshed with our everyday attitudes and concerns. The argument that Dreyfus and Sp…Read more
  •  21
    Finding the space of sense: Book review: David Morris, The sense of space (review)
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 7 (1): 155-158. 2008.
  •  165
    Gadamer was fond of telling of his last meeting with his old teacher Martin Heidegger: ‘You are right’, said Heidegger, ‘language is conversation [Sprache ist Gespräch].’1 We might argue as to what such a comment, assuming Gadamer remembered it aright, would really have meant for Heidegger – whether it would have constituted a significant revision of any view to which Heidegger was himself committed.2 The fact that Gadamer felt it worth repeating, however, does indicate something of Gadamer’s co…Read more
  •  3
    Death and the Unity of a Life
    In J. E. Malpas & Robert C. Solomon (eds.), Death and Philosophy, Routledge. pp. 120--134. 1998.
  •  47
    Placing Understanding/Understanding Place
    Sophia 56 (3): 379-391. 2017.
    This paper sets out an account of hermeneutics as essentially ‘topological’ in character at the same time as it also argues that hermeneutics has a key role to play in making clear the nature of the topological. At the centre of the argument is the idea that place and understanding are intimately connected, that this is what determines the interconnection between topology and hermeneutics, and that this also implies an intimate belonging-together of place and thinking, of place and experience, o…Read more
  •  10
    Watching 9/11: In the Time of the Event
    Philosophy Today 58 (2): 125-139. 2014.
    Taking an image by Thomas Hoepker as its starting point, this essay examines the discontinuities and contradictions that appear around the contemporary rhetoric of the ‘event’ as given particular instantiation in the destruction of the World Trade Centre on September 11, 2001. It is argued that the rhetoric at issue here, in spite of its emphasis on the ‘eventful’ character of our time, actually serves to conceal the urgency of our contemporary situation as well as disabling any genuine response…Read more
  •  41
    Every threshold is placed at an edge, and yet not merely an edge, for the threshold always carries with it a sense of opening up toward or closing away from. Only that place at the edge that anticipates or remembers can constitute a threshold. The threshold thus is not a place in which one can remain – to do so is for it to cease to be a threshold – but is always a place of movement and transition. Indeed, one might say that the threshold is the coalescence of a time into the form of a place, si…Read more
  •  18
    O Problema Da Dependência Em Ser E Tempo
    Natureza Humana 10 (2): 183-216. 2008.
    Para qualquer um interessado no lugar da espacialidade no pensamento de Heidegger, um dos principais problemas apresentados por Ser e tempo é a tentativa, feita no § 70, "de derivar o existencial espacialidade a partir da temporalidade". Esta tentativa, que foi considerada "insustentável" pelo próprio Heidegger, mostra-se não ser meramente periférica na análise global. Pelo contrário, ela se liga a certos aspectos centrais e problemáticos no argumento de Ser e tempo, no qual está incluído o trat…Read more
  •  49
    The transcendental circle
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 75 (1). 1997.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  182
    One of the most influential and significant developments in the philosophy of language over the last thirty years has been the rise of externalist conceptions of content. This essay aims to explore the implications of a form of externalism, largely derived from the work of Donald Davidson, for thinking about history, and in so doing to suggest one way in which contemporary philosophy of language may engage with contemporary philosophy of history. Much of the discussion focuses on the elaboration…Read more
  •  25
    Home and the Place of Memory
    with Linn Miller
  •  5
    The discomfort of strangeness
    The Philosophers' Magazine 27 34-36. 2004.
  •  21
    The work of the philosopher Donald Davidson is not only wide ranging in its influence and vision, but also in the breadth of issues that it encompasses. Davidson's work includes seminal contributions to philosophy of language and mind, to philosophy of action, and to epistemology and metaphysics. In _Dialogues with Davidson_, leading scholars engage with Davidson's work as it connects not only with aspects of current analytic thinking but also with a wider set of perspectives, including those of…Read more
  •  102
    Self-knowledge and scepticism
    Erkenntnis 40 (2): 165-184. 1994.
    Donald Davidson has argued that 'most of our beliefs must be true' and that global scepticism is therefore false. Davidson's arguments to this conclusion often seem to depend on externalist considerations. Davidson's position has been criticised, however, on the grounds that he does not defeat the sceptic, but rather already assumes the falsity of scepticism through his appeal to externalism. Indeed, it has been claimed that far from defeating the sceptic Davidson introduces an even more extreme…Read more
  •  9
    Hubert L. Dreyfus's engagement with other thinkers has always been driven by his desire to understand certain basic questions about ourselves and our world. The philosophers on whom his teaching and research have focused are those whose work seems to him to make a difference to the world. The essays in this volume reflect this desire to "make a difference"—not just in the world of academic philosophy, but in the broader world. Dreyfus has helped to create a culture of reflection—of questioning t…Read more
  •  44
    Consequences of hermeneutics: fifty years after Gadamer's Truth and method (edited book)
    with Santiago Zabala
    Northwestern University Press. 2010.
    Celebrates the 50th anniversary of the publication of one of the most important philosophical works in the 20th century with essays by most of the leading figures in contemporary hermeneutic theory.
  •  42
    Why an Aristotelian Account of Truth Is (More or Less) All We Need
    Philosophical Topics 44 (1): 27-38. 2016.
    This paper advances an account of truth that has as its starting point Aristotle’s comments about truth at Metaphysics 1011b1. It argues that there are two key ideas in the Aristotelian account: that truth belongs to ‘sayings that’; and that truth involves both what is said and what is. Beginning with the second of these apparent truisms, the paper argues for the crucial role of the distinction between ‘what is said’ and ‘what is’ in the understanding of truth, on the grounds that it is essentia…Read more
  •  1
    Martin Heidegger, Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 77 (2): 242-242. 1999.
  •  74
    Interdisciplinary perspectives on landscape, from the philosophical to the geographical, with an emphasis on the overarching concept of place.
  • Amberg, B. T.: "Donald Davidson's Philosophy of Language: An Introduction" (review)
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 68 (n/a): 475. 1990.