•  263
    The necessities of Hegel's logics
    In Angelica Nuzzo (ed.), Hegel and the Analytic Tradition, Continuum. 2009.
    want to question this idea of a pure presuppositionless self-developing sequence of logical categories. This is part of a larger investigation of the inherence of Hegel's thought in historical language. Concerning the necessary self-development of thought, I have three objections to propose. The first concerns the difficulty of recognizing a uniquely correct sequence of categories, when the various versions all express positive insights. The second concerns the very idea of a unified sequence. …Read more
  •  39
    Pythagoras Bound: Limit and Unlimited in Plato's Philebus
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 21 (4): 497-511. 1983.
    Though Plato favors physical atoms in his Timaeus, they are not ultimate; he generates them from a formless energy-space plus mathematical patterns. On the other hand most interpreters read the Platonic Forms as ultimate intellectual atoms. I suggest that Plato refuses atomism on all levels, and the Forms themselves should be seen as generated from a combination of limit and unlimited, as we are told in the Philebus and as is hinted at in the reports on the "unwritten doctrines."
  •  1148
    Hegel's architecture
    In Stephen Houlgate (ed.), Hegel and the Arts, Northwestern University Press. 2007.
    "The first of the particular arts . . . is architecture." (A 13.116/1.83)1 For Hegel, architecture stands at several beginnings. It is the art closest to raw nature. It is the beginning art in a progressive spiritualization that will culminate in poetry and music. The drive for art is spirit's drive to become fully itself by encountering itself; art makes spirit's essential reality present as an outer sensible work of its own powers.2 (A 13.453/1.351) If Hegel's narrative of the arts creates a h…Read more
  •  307
    Introduction
    with Suzanne Foisy
    Dialogue 39 (4): 651. 2000.
    Introduction to a volume on Hegel, asking why his thought continues to be relevant today.
  •  253
    Spirit in Ashes (review)
    The Owl of Minerva 21 (1): 96-99. 1989.
    This provocative book questions whether contemporary humanity can face death in any of the traditional ways, since the events of our century have created a new selfhood and a new death. Wyschogrod describes the “death event” and the “death world”; these refer to the Holocaust but also to the destructive bombings in World War II, and most importantly to the death-in-life of the Nazi and Stalinist concentration and labor camps. Her thesis is
  •  294
    Home on the range: Planning and totality
    Research in Phenomenology 22 (1): 3-11. 1992.
    This essay argues against global plans and hierarchical systems, whether in urban planning or art and life.
  •  42
    Coming down from the trees: Metaphysics and the history of classification
    Continental Philosophy Review 35 (2): 161-183. 2002.
    Three kinds of concepts can be distinguished in Plato and Aristotle, empirical genera and species, “transcendental” concepts such as being and unity, and polarized “meanings of being” such as power and actuality. Both Kant and Hegel break with the traditional dominance of polarized meanings of being, but they do so in different ways which are at work as competing trends inside both Continental and analytic philosophy today
  •  439
    I am a philosopher with Parkinson’s Disease. Over the past several years I’ve been trying to write about my situation. I wrote about how I was forced to face the disease. I described how the disease twists and distorts my world. Then I asked myself, as a philosophy writer and teacher, whether I could say anything that might help myself or others facing life with Parkinson’s? I found ideas in the ancient Stoics and expanded them with ideas about time, coming up with suggestions for living as exce…Read more
  •  327
    The Particular Logic Of Modernity
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 41 31-42. 2000.
    A discussion of the logical role of particular concepts in Robert Pippin's reading Hegel as a theorist of modernity, with special reference to the question whether modernity can be surpassed or left behind.
  •  1842
    Kolb discusses postmodern architectural styles and theories within the context of philosophical ideas about modernism and postmodernism. He focuses on what it means to dwell in a world and within a history and to act from or against a tradition
  •  160
    Heidegger at 100, in America
    Journal of the History of Ideas 52 (1): 140-151. 1991.
    The year 1989 marked the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of Martin Heidegger. What has happened to his thought in America? This essay offers a perspective on what I take to be the main trends and some representative works in Heidegger studies on the American side of the Atlantic (with perforce some simplifications both within and among the trends I mention).
  •  180
    Beyond the Pale
    The Owl of Minerva 36 (1): 15-30. 2004.
    Frederick Neuhouser's The Foundations of Hegel's Social Theory expertly answers many standard objections to Hegel's theory, and offers a careful reading of its basic principles. However, questions remain whether Neuhouser can successfully reconstruct Hegel's theory while avoiding its links to Hegel's logic. Hegel's normative conclusions depend on logical principles about the self that are not adequately translated into Neuhouser's normative and consequentialist arguments.
  •  7
    Spirit in Ashes (review)
    The Owl of Minerva 21 (1): 96-99. 1989.
    This provocative book questions whether contemporary humanity can face death in any of the traditional ways, since the events of our century have created a new selfhood and a new death. Wyschogrod describes the “death event” and the “death world”; these refer to the Holocaust but also to the destructive bombings in World War II, and most importantly to the death-in-life of the Nazi and Stalinist concentration and labor camps. Her thesis is
  •  888
    Darwin Rocks Hegel: Does Nature Have A History?
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 57 97-117. 2008.
    In the popular press and the halls of politics, controversies over evolution are increasingly strident these days. Hegel is relevant in this connection, even though he rejected the theories of evolution he knew about, because he wanted rational understanding but without claims to intelligent design. He is reported to have said that nature has no history, but a closer examination will show that his ideaqs are more nuanced and that there is more room for darwinian ideas than one might expect, thou…Read more
  •  427
    Pythagoras bound: Limit and unlimited in Plato's
    Journal of the History of Philosophy 21 (4): 497-511. 1983.
    Studying Plato's "unwritten doctrines" in the light of his discussion of limit and unlimited in his dialogue Philebus. The essay raises also the question whether there is too much "atomism" in the usual presentation of Plato's Forms as individual absolute entities, rather than as themselves derived from a more fundamental limit/unlimited ontology.
  •  50
    What Is Open and What Is Closed in the Philosophy of Hegel
    Philosophical Topics 19 (2): 29-50. 1991.
    This essay studies the ways in which Hegel's thought demands "closure," critiques various proposals for an "open Hegelianism," and concludes that Hegel cannot achieve the closure he seeks, and that "open Hegelianisms" are not Hegelian because of their separations of form from content. Nonetheless the essay argues that Hegel can play an important role in the analyses of thought and culture today, in part as a corrective to excessive claims of openness and indeterminacy.
  •  27
  •  608
    Heidegger and Habermas on criticism and totality
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 52 (3): 683-693. 1992.
    Habermas's criticizes Heidegger for insulating totalities of meaning from possible overturning by attempts to invalidate individual claims. I first state Habermas's criticism, then elaborate an example from Heideggerthat supports Habermas's attack. Then I defend Heidegger by distinguishing levels of meaning in Heidegger's "world" from Habermas's more propositional "lifeworld." I conclude by accepting Habermas's objection restated in terms of the contrast between transcendental and local conditio…Read more
  •  4
    Beyond the Pale
    The Owl of Minerva 36 (1): 15-30. 2004.
    Frederick Neuhouser's The Foundations of Hegel's Social Theory expertly answers many standard objections to Hegel's theory, and offers a careful reading of its basic principles. However, questions remain whether Neuhouser can successfully reconstruct Hegel's theory while avoiding its links to Hegel's logic. Hegel's normative conclusions depend on logical principles about the self that are not adequately translated into Neuhouser's normative and consequentialist arguments.
  •  27
    New Perspectives on Hegel's Philosophy of Religion (edited book)
    State University of New York Press. 1992.
    Also in paper (unseen) for $14.95. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR