•  50
    The Sky Starts at Our Feet
    Environment, Space, Place 3 (2): 7-21. 2011.
    Looking at the finding of several archeoastronomers, who examine the relationship of built cultures to celestial bodies, this essay speculates on the unique relationship of the inhabitants of Chaco Canyon in New Mexico to the earth and sky. The Anasazi who populated this region suddenly disappeared around 1000 A.D. and little is known about their culture, religion, and world except by studying the structures they left behind. This essay looks at their kivas, dwellings, the puzzling “Sun dagger” …Read more
  •  41
    Review (review)
    Chiasmi International 13 563-569. 2011.
    RésuméS’agissant de l’oeuvre de Merleau-Ponty on s’aperçoit, si l’on n’en reste pas à la surface, que le beau n’est pas une catégorie du jugement esthétique dans le sensclassique, mais plutôt, selon la formule de Galen A. Johnson dans son Introduction, une dimension du « domaine entier du visible ». Selon Johnson, « le beau est la profondeur, le rythme et le rayonnement de l’Être lui-même ». Or ces dimensions de la chair sont les clés pour mieux comprendre l’ontologie merleau-pontienne. Si donc …Read more
  •  111
    Humans, Animals, Machines: Blurring Boundaries
    State University of New York Press. 2008.
    _Examines the overlap and blurring of boundaries among humans, animals, and machines._.
  •  65
    Short reviews
    Human Studies 3 (1): 185-186. 1980.
  •  902
    This essay discusses how our traditional ethics may harbor assumptions that place humans in a position in which overt violence towards animals is an almost inevitable outcome since their formulation involves violence towards ourselves and our animal fellows in our cutting our embodied ties with them. The essay explores Derrida’s Animal that Therefore, I Am, in its detailing of the two discourses within European intellectual history of those who felt they were “above” animals and were not address…Read more
  •  1399
  •  93
    Il concetto di Natura di Merleau-Ponty (riassunto)
    Chiasmi International 2 246-247. 2000.
  •  1013
    Touring as Authentically Embodying Place and Glancing a New World
    Environment, Space, Place 1 (1): 169-188. 2009.
    The critique of tourism as being only a distanced, detached, and consumerist passing through of foreign landscapes and cultures isdisputed in this essay. The idea that tourism necessarily fits the paradigm of inauthenticity as the tranquilized and alienated hopping from spot to spot in prepackaged, superficial presentations is contrasted with another sense of tourism as drawing upon the potential power of the glance to disrupt the everyday, to focus on the particular, to be surprised by the new,…Read more
  •  1316
    Merleau-Ponty's Concept of Nature: Passage, the Oneiric and Interanimality.
    Chiasmi International 2:223-48. 2 (223-48): 223-245. 2000.
  •  1
  •  105
    This wide-ranging work explores what the emotions, "if approached on their own terms," can tell us about our world and our selves. By doing so sensitively, it fills a missing space in Western philosophy, literary theory and psychology, in which the emotions are seen for the first time as the primary way of understanding experience through the depth of the sensual-perceptual, rather than as mere handmaidens to reason or biology. The work weaves together diverse philosophical and literary works, f…Read more
  •  120
    Wild Hunger (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 37 (4): 173-175. 2005.
  •  82
  •  45
    John Sallis, ed., Merleau-Ponty: Perception, Structure, Language: A Collection of Essays (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 21 (1): 109-112. 1989.
  •  63
    Beyond Subjectivity and Representation (review)
    International Studies in Philosophy 35 (1): 152-154. 2003.