•  26
    In The Sacred Monstrous author Wendy Hamblet traces the historical and social fact of violence through the work of Girard, Bloch, Lorenz and Burket. She takes up the charge advanced by social theorists, anthropologists and others that violence is steeped in our being; it pervades our generations and is imbedded in the ethos of our modern institutions. Hamblet's discussion of human history re-frames our understanding of how violence works in history and society. The Sacred Monstrous is a salient …Read more
  • This essay offers a detailed and comprehensive study of the ethical thought of post-Holocaustphenomenologist, Emmanuel Levinas, through the lens of human passions. Its purpose is to reveal thestrengths, ambiguities and risks inherent in the practice of an ethos of infinite generosity, in the modernera
  •  2
    Spinoza: Ironist and Moral Philosopher
    Gnosis 5 (1): 1-20. 2001.
  •  88
    This paper reconstructs the deficiencies of formal democracies to explain the internal injustices of the modern state, the self‐righteous swaggering foreign policy of Western powers, and the dangerously over‐simplified, polar logic characterizing the war rhetoric of the modern era. In a brief tour through the non‐liberal tradition of democratic thought, drawing connections between the tragic mythological origins of Western understandings of self and world, the paper attempts to demonstrate that …Read more
  •  67
  •  154
    The Geography of Goodness
    The Monist 86 (3): 355-366. 2003.
  • What is cruelty? A discussion
    with Giorgio Baruchello
    Appraisal 5. 2004.
  • Richard Stivers, The Illusion of Freedom and Equality
    Philosophy in Review 29 (2): 143. 2009.
  • Mortal being is not being pure and simple, not posit-ive being alone, as the lived experiencesuggests it to be. Living being is always a living of mortal flesh, a living taunted by death as “thenothingness that wearies it.” This taunting doggedly pursues the living being and turns it inward inwhat Levinas terms “inter-esse.” In living its mortality, essence is always inter-esse — inside ofitself — in the for-itself of self-interest.This paper attempts to track the opening of essence from its “in…Read more
  • Is violence always cruel?
    with Giorgio Baruchello
    Appraisal 5. 2004.
  • The symposium revisited: The presence of love´s absences
    Existentia 14 (3-4): 361-367. 2004.
  •  54
    A Tragic Ethos: The Irresponsibility of the Host in Martin Heidegger's ‘the Ister’
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 35 (2): 157-167. 2004.
    (2004). A Tragic Ethos: The Irresponsibility of the Host in Martin Heidegger's ‘the Ister’. Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology: Vol. 35, Heidegger and Husserl, pp. 157-167.
  •  14
    Swans, Ravens, Death and Tyranny: On the Mythology of Freedom
    Philosophical Frontiers: A Journal of Emerging Thought 4 (2). 2009.
  •  84
    Positive Peace (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 34 (1): 85-87. 2011.