• Book Review (review)
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 9 (4): 309-314. 1995.
    Tractarian Semantics by Peter Carruthers; The Metaphysics of the Tractatus by Peter Carruthers.
  •  41
    Enlightened Education
    Commentary: Educating For the Good Society 15 117-125. 1998.
    The article argues that the enlightenment ideal of a "science of man" distorts the educational process, that is incapable of accounting for human creativity, and that it is incapable of producing a whole well balanced human being.
  • Wittgenstein's Philosophy and Austrian Economics
    Studies in the Sociology of Science 5 (4): 1-11. 2014.
  •  212
    Wittgenstein, German organicism, chaos, and the center of life
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 42 (3): 297-326. 2004.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 42.3 (2004) 297-326 [Access article in PDF] Wittgenstein, German Organicism, Chaos, and the Center of Life Richard Mcdonough No supposition seems to me more natural than that there is no process in the brain correlated with associating or with thinking; so that it would be impossible to read off thought processes from brain processes. I mean this: if I talk or write, there is, I assume, a system o…Read more
  •  1
    The Myth of the Given: Sellars on Sentience vs Sapience (review)
    Metascience 8 (2): 292-296. 1999.
  •  49
    Plato’s Cosmic Animal Vs. the Daoist Cosmic Plant: Religious and Ideological Implications
    Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 15 (45): 3-23. 2016.
    Heidegger claims that it is the ultimate job of philosophy to preserve the force of the “elemental words” in which human beings express themselves. Many of these elemental words are found in the various cosmogonies that have informed cultural ideologies around the world. Two of these “elemental words,” which shape the ideologies are the animal-model of the cosmos in Plato’s Timaeus and the mechanical models developed in the 17th-18th centuries in Europe. The paper argues that Daoism employs a th…Read more
  • The paper argues, contrary to contemporary views that Kant giving abstract functional descriptions of the mechanisms that underlie cognition, that Kant gives a series of arguments that there can never be a cognitive science.
  • A Synoptic View of Kant's Emergentism
    Iyyun 60 245-274. 2011.
    The paper argues that, as opposed to giving abstract descriptions of cognitive mechanisms, numerous emergence like positions, in senses opposed to mechanism, are found in Kant's various works.
  •  60
    Wittgenstein and Whitehead Revisited
    Process Studies 45 (2): 123-134. 2016.
    In this article I criticize the treatment of the relationship between Wittgenstein and Whitehead asserted by Jerry Gill in a 2014 article in Process Studies. I argue that Wittgenstein s later philosophy is much more sympathetic to Whitehead s view than Gill thinks.
  •  1
    Review of John Passmore's Recent Philosophers (review)
    Artificial Intelligence Review 13 (3): 241-247. 1997.
  •  60
    The last stand of mechanism
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 6 (3): 206-25. 1992.
  • Plato's Anti-Mechanistic Account of Communication
    Language and Communication 11 (3): 165-179. 1991.
  •  108
    Hegel’s Organic Account of Mind and Critique of Cognitive Science
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 19 (1): 67-97. 1996.
    Organic metaphors appear as early as §2 of the Phenomenology and throughout Hegel’s major works. The culmination of the dialectic is the moment where Life understands itself. Hegel even identifies the Notion with the “principle of all life”. Yet despite Hegel’s emphasis on the notion of Life, there is no general agreement about the significance of his notion of organism. Some commentators emphasize Hegel’s organicism only in connection with the notion of organic unities in Hegel’s social philoso…Read more
  •  81
    Heidegger, Externalism, and Mechanism
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 26 (2): 127-146. 1995.
    (1995). Heidegger, Externalism, and Mechanism. Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology: Vol. 26, Externalism, Culture, and Praxis, pp. 127-146.
  •  62
    The Dao that Cannot be Named
    Philosophy East and West 67 (3): 738-762. 2017.
    To produce a history entirely from speculations alone seems no better than to sketch a romance.... Yet, what may not be [known about actual history], can, nonetheless, be attempted through speculation regarding their first beginnings, as far as these are made by nature. The first stanza of the Dao-de Jing, one of the most memorable passages in world literature, is not a paradigm of clarity. Alan Chan distinguishes six sorts of approaches to interpreting the Dao-de Jing : mythological, mystical, …Read more
  • Reflections on Reflexivity
    Language Sciences 22 203-222. 2000.
  • Richard M. Gale (1932-2015)
    Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Philosophy in a Fallen Language: Wittgenstein, Goethe, Milton
    Studies in Literature and Language 10 (4). 2015.
  •  71
    Monk on Russell’s Heart of Darkness
    Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 35 (1): 29-42. 2015.
    The paper argues that Russell’s fascination with Conrad’s Heart of Darkness reveals a positive aspect of Russell’s character neglected by Monk’s biography. Section 1 sketches some of the darker aspects of Russell’s character. §2 outlines the relevant themes in Heart of Darkness. §3 argues that Russell’s fascination both with Conrad and his novel derives from his resolute commitment to a painful exercise in self-knowledge. §4 explains the more positive perspective on Russell’s “strength of mind” …Read more
  • Discussion of Emergence and Creativity
    with Terry Dartnall
    In Terry Dartnall (ed.), Creativity, Cognition and Knowledge, Ablex Publishing Corporation. pp. 302-314. 2002.
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    Wittgenstein's Doctrine of Silence
    The Thomist 56 (4): 695-699. 1992.
    The paper argues that Wittgenstein's "doctrine of silence", the view that one cannot "say" philosophical propositions (and certain other things), does not, as usually believed, mean that one cannot, in the ordinary sense, engage in philosophical discourse about these things. The paper argues that in a certain sense on can "say" these things (as Wittgenstein himself does in the Tractatus). As a consequence, Wittgenstein is not, as some believe, committed to the inconsistent attempt to say what …Read more
  • The Limits of the Enlightenment
    Language and Communication 10 (4): 255-265. 1990.