•  271
    Philosophy's Nostalgia
    In Hagi Kenaan & Ilit Ferber (eds.), Philosophy's moods: the affective grounds of thinking, Springer. pp. 87--101. 2011.
    This chapter attempts to examine nostalgia as both a mood or disposition in general, and as a mood or disposition that is characteristic of philosophical reflection. Nostalgia is a combination of the Greek nostos, meaning home or the return home, with algos, meaning pain, so that its literal meaning is a pain associated with the return home. Part of this inquiry will involve a rethinking of the mood of nostalgia and what that mood encompasses. Rather than understand the nostalgic as characterize…Read more
  •  125
    The transcendental circle
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 75 (1). 1997.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  277
    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
  •  27
    Heidegger Na Cidade De Benjamin
    Natureza Humana 12 (2): 1-14. 2010.
    O lugar comum, no que tange à imagem de Heidegger, é a de um filósofo firmemente enraizado, não na cidade de Freiburg, na qual passou grande parte de sua vida, mas na região rural alemânico-suábia, nos arredores do povoado de Messkirch, onde nasceu. Poderia parecer que a distância entre Heidegger e Benjamin, entre Messkirch e Berlim, ou Paris, não poderia ser maior. Mas até que ponto estão as predileções pessoais de Heidegger pelo provinciano e o bauerlich de fato ligadas às posições filosóficas…Read more
  •  109
    The dualities fo work self-consumption and self-creation
    Philosophy Today 49 (3): 256-263. 2005.
  • Gadamer
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved January 21 2012. 2009.
  •  45
    Much 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.
  •  99
    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
  •  76
    A Taste of Madeleine
    International Philosophical Quarterly 34 (4): 433-451. 1994.
  •  105
    (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.
  •  124
    Interdisciplinary perspectives on landscape, from the philosophical to the geographical, with an emphasis on the overarching concept of place.
  •  83
    Locating Interpretation
    Philosophical Topics 27 (2): 129-148. 1999.
  •  92
    Water, 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
  •  91
    Hans-Georg Gadamer
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
  •  44
    Book Reviews (review)
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 8 (2): 253-269. 2000.
  •  97
    Ted 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