•  36
    Tradition(s) (review)
    The Owl of Minerva 32 (1): 65-82. 2000.
    A detailed review essay discussing reason, hermeneutics, and understanding through the lens of Steven Watson's two-volume work, Tradition(s). It offers a transcendental for constitutive commitments of reason in dialog with Watson's more Gadamerian views.
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    Liberty of the Higher-Order Will
    Faith and Philosophy 19 (4): 437-461. 2002.
  •  2
  •  12
    Augustine on Liberty of the Higher-Order Will
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 81 67-89. 2007.
    I have argued that like Harry Frankfurt, Augustine implicitly distinguishes between first-order desires and higher-order volitions; yet unlike Frankfurt, Augustineheld that the liberty to form different possible volitional identifications is essential to responsibility for our character. Like Frankfurt, Augustine recognizes that we can sometimes be responsible for the desires on which we act without being able to do or desire otherwise; but for Augustine, this is true only because such responsib…Read more
  •  14
    Tradition(s) (review)
    The Owl of Minerva 32 (1): 65-82. 2000.
    Tradition must rank as one of the ten most important works within the hermeneutic tradition to be published in the 1990s, alongside recent books by Jean-Luc Nancy, Drucilla Cornell, Simon Critchley, John Caputo, Paul Ricoeur, and Jacques Derrida. In Tradition, Stephen Watson, who is influenced by Heidegger, Gadamer, Merleau-Ponty, Derrida, and Alasdair MacIntyre, works out a historical hermeneutics with obvious connections to their views, but that also stakes out a different position "between" t…Read more