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45Much contemporary talk of virtual 'worlds' proceeds as if the virtual could somehow be considered as in competition with or as an alternative to the world of the 'nonvirtual' or the 'everyday'. This paper argues that such a contrast is fundamentally mistaken, and that the virtual is not autonomous with respect to the everyday, but is rather embedded within it, and an extension of it.
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49Review of Alejandro A. Vallega, Heidegger and the Issue of Space. Thinking on Exilic Grounds (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (6). 2004.
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99Why an Aristotelian Account of Truth Is (More or Less) All We NeedPhilosophical 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
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105On the map: Comments on Stuart Elden's mapping the present: Heidegger, Foucault and the project of a spatial historyPhilosophy and Geography 6 (2). 2003.(2003). On the map: Comments on Stuart Elden's Mapping the Present: Heidegger, Foucault and the Project of a Spatial History. Philosophy & Geography: Vol. 6, No. 2, pp. 213-218.
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127The Place of Landscape: Concepts, Contexts, Studies (edited book)MIT Press. 2011.Interdisciplinary perspectives on landscape, from the philosophical to the geographical, with an emphasis on the overarching concept of place.
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92Water, its presence or absence, and the forms in which it appears, is fundamental to any and every place on earth. Indeed, along with soil, air and light, water is elemental to place, and so also to all life and dwelling in place. Moreover, human life is itself essentially determined through its entanglement in place and places, and so is constituted, if indirectly, perhaps, through water and its forms. The centrality of place that I am alluding to here arises out of a conception of the relation…Read more
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97Ted Relph’s review of Heidegger’s Topology acknowledges the importance of Heidegger’s thought in the contemporary turn to place within the Humanities and Social Sciences, just as it acknowledges the importance of the philosophical inquiry into place as such (Relph is also particularly generous in his estimation of the role of my work, in Heidegger’s Topology and elsewhere, in contributing to this). Moreover, Relph provides a strikingly apt and vivid image of the way the concept of ‘place’ has, i…Read more
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133Heidegger, Authenticity, and Modernity: Essays in Honor of Hubert L. Dreyfus (edited book)MIT Press. 2000.For more than a quarter of a century, Hubert L. Dreyfus has been the leading voice in American philosophy for the continuing relevance of phenomenology, particularly as developed by Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Dreyfus has influenced a generation of students and a wide range of colleagues, and these volumes are an excellent representation of the extent and depth of that influence.In keeping with Dreyfus's openness to others' ideas, many of the essays in this volum…Read more
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23Walter 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
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41Perspectives on Human Suffering (edited book)Springer. 2012.This volume brings together a range of interdisciplinary perspectives on a topic of central importance, but which has otherwise tended to be approached from within just one or another disciplinary framework. Most of the essays contained here incorporate some degree of interdisciplinarity in their own approach, but the volume nevertheless divides into three main sections: Philosophical considerations; Humanities approaches; Legal, medical, and therapeutic contexts. The volume includes essays by p…Read more
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26The Threshold of the WorldIn Thiemo Breyer & Oliver Müller (eds.), Funktionen des Lebendigen, De Gruyter. pp. 161-168. 2016.
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199Why does Language Matter to History (and History to Language)?Journal of the Philosophy of History 4 (3): 241-243. 2010.
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122On not giving up the world - Davidson and the grounds of beliefInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 16 (2). 2008.What is the relation between our beliefs, or thoughts in general, and the perceptual experience of the world that gives rise to those beliefs? Donald Davidson is usually taken to have a well-known answer to this question that runs as follows: while our beliefs are, at least in part, caused by our experience, such experience does not thereby count as providing a rational ground for those beliefs; our beliefs are thus evidentially grounded in other beliefs, but not in the experience that gives ris…Read more
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110The nature of interpretative charityDialectica 42 (1): 17-36. 1988.SummaryIn Davidson's Theory of radical interpretation the principle of charity plays a crucial role. However the principle is the subject of widespread misunderstanding. The author attempts to provide an overall account of the principle and in doing so details some aspects of the holism which characterises the Davidsonian approach to interpretation. Charity is shown as inseparable from that holism. Two aspects of the principle are distinguished and some objections to the principle are also consi…Read more
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224Holism, realism, and truth: how to be an anti‐relativist and not give up on heidegger – a debate with Christopher NorrisInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 12 (3). 2004.Responding to criticisms raised by Christopher Norris, this paper defends an anti-relativist reading of the work of both Davidson and Heidegger arguing that that there are important lessons to be learnt from their example - one can thus be an anti-relativist (as well as a certain sort of realist) without giving up on Davidson or on Heidegger.
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46Geografia, Biologia e Política: Heidegger sobre lugar e mundoNatureza Humana 11 (1): 171-200. 2009.Este artigo argumenta, começando pela justaposição de Heidegger ao lado dos geógrafos Ratzel e Vidal de la Blanche, e do etologista von Uexküll, realizada por Giorgio Agamben, em seu ensaio The Open, que a estética da morada , que encontramos no último Heidegger, tem que ser entendida em termos da centralidade para o pensamento de Heidegger de um conceito que também é central para o pensamento geográfico-cultural , nomeadamente, o conceito de lugar ou ‘espaço geográfico’. A centralidade dada ao …Read more
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4Death and the Unity of a LifeIn Jeff Malpas & Robert C. Solomon (eds.), Death and philosophy, Routledge. pp. 120--134. 1998.
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38Review of Donald Davidson, Truth, Language, and History (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (2). 2006.
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57William David Joske 1928 - 2006 emeritus professor of philosophy, university of tasmaniaAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 85 (2). 2007.This Article does not have an abstract
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41Every 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
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187Place and Experience: A Philosophical TopographyCambridge 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
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170The Place of Topology: Responding to Crowell, Beistegui, and YoungInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 19 (2). 2011.The idea of philosophical topology, or topography as I call it outside of the Heideggerian context, has become increasingly central to my work over the last twenty years. While the idea is not indebted only to Heideggers thinking, it is probably Heidegger to whom I owe the most. Moreover, one of my claims, central to _Heideggers Topology_, is that Heideggers own work cannot adequately be understood except as topological in character, and so as centrally concerned with place _topos, Ort, Ort…Read more
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87Martin HeideggerIn Robert Solomon & David Sherman (eds.), The Blackwell Guide to Continental Philosophy, Wiley-blackwell. 2007.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.
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University of TasmaniaPhilosophy & Gender Studies