•  169
    Some Remarks in Response to Professor Wang Shouchang
    Contemporary Chinese Thought 30 (4): 75-80. 1999.
    I want to thank Professor Wang for a very interesting and informative paper. It is especially informative to one who is relatively ignorant of the complex history of China's involvement with notions of modernity, and the variety of its contacts with Western influences. On the whole, the paper offers much valuable information about significant historical landmarks, and the diversity of ways that Chinese intellectuals and leaders have responded to them. Overall, four phases or periods are differen…Read more
  • Jla west 145
    with Joel Thomas Tif-rno, A. Third, Nick Trakakis, Peter Gan Chong Beng, and Phillip H. Wiebe
    Sophia 45 (2). 2006.
  •  76
    Philosophy and Failure
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 2 (4): 288-305. 1988.
  •  26
    Hegel, Art, and History
    Proceedings of the Hegel Society of America 7 173-184. 1984.
  •  31
    The mathesis of nature, the poeisis of naturing
    Journal of Dharma 20 (4): 321-333. 1995.
  • Art and the Absolute
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 2 (1): 57-62. 1988.
  •  45
    The Irish Mind
    Philosophical Studies 31 374-380. 1986.
  •  51
    Prix Cardinal Mercier 1995
    with Pierre Magnard and Roger Aubert
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 96 (4): 765-777. 1998.
  •  51
    Interview with Richard Eldridge
    Ethical Perspectives 5 (4): 285-304. 1998.
    Desmond: Talking to Richard on the way over, I proposed that our discussion would focus on the theme of autonomy and embeddedness or relatedness. This is a recurrent concern in all of Richard’s writing. I thought it would be a good idea to look at this issue of autonomy and embeddedness in a variety of different forms, in relation to different philosophers that have influenced the work of Richard, but also in a variety of different domains such as ethics, aesthetics or literature, romanticism.In…Read more
  •  81
    Doing Justice and the Practice of Philosophy
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 79 41-59. 2005.
    There is a sense of doing justice prior to the juxtaposition of theory and practice, accounting for an ontological vulnerability prior to both social power andsocial vulnerability. Justice in the sense of “being true” involves fidelity to truth that we neither possess nor construct, preceding all efforts to enact justice. The charge to be just precedes any just act. There is a “patience of being,” or a receiving of being before acting, which we must then actively take up. All this has implicatio…Read more
  •  59
    Conscience in Newman's Thought
    Review of Metaphysics 44 (4): 843-843. 1991.
    The author of this book admits that Newman's writings on the topic of conscience are scant and not extensively developed. He deals with such modest offerings in Newman by turning almost immediately from Newman himself. So in his initial reflections he claims that there is an "ordinary" concept of conscience with which he will be dealing. His guides here are ordinary language philosophers, and most especially Gilbert Ryle.
  •  64
    Suspicion and Faith (review)
    International Philosophical Quarterly 34 (4): 511-512. 1994.
  • Filosofía del arte a la sombra de Hegel
    Estudios Filosóficos 56 31-52. 2007.
  •  15
    Presidential Address
    Proceedings of the Hegel Society of America 12 1-28. 1995.
  •  41
    Introduction
    Ethical Perspectives 5 (4): 231-232. 1998.
    This is a special edition of Ethical Perspectives devoted to the issue of autonomy. While the issue of autonomy has its own particular form in Anglo- American discussion, the essays in this issue focus, in the main, on questions arising in the more continental tradition. The essay by William Desmond examines certain dialectical equivocities in the notion of self-determination. These are related to an underlying sense of valuelessness marking modernity’s feeling for the ethos, to a propensity to …Read more
  •  53
    Being and the Between
    State University of New York Press. 1995.
    _This is the culmination of a systematic metaphysics written by a world-class philosopher, demonstrating the need for a renewal of metaphysics._.
  •  13
    Art and the Absolute Revisited
    Proceedings of the Hegel Society of America 14 1-12. 2000.
  •  64
    Richard Kearney's Dialogues attempts to speak across the divide between Anglo-American philosophy and recent Continental thought. The book does not sound any fashionable fanfares regarding rapprochement between these two traditions. More soberly, it tries to introduce to Anglo-American philosophers certain European thinkers who have recently exerted significant influence. Unlike a more conventional approach that would anthologize some representative writings of these thinkers, Richard Kearney he…Read more
  •  35
    Introduction
    Ethical Perspectives 6 (3): 199-200. 1999.
    The current issue of Ethical Perspectives is a double issue reflecting significant discussions of ethical issues that occurred in Leuven in the very recent past. The volume is composed in the main of two seminars, one led by Michael Walzer, the other by Bernard Williams. These well-known and highly respected thinkers were guests at Leuven in the past year. Michael Walzer was the holder of the Multatuli Chair, while Bernard Williams was the holder of the Mercier Chair at the Institute of Philosop…Read more
  •  53
    Serviceable Disposability and the Blandness of the Good
    Ethical Perspectives 5 (2): 136-143. 1998.
    The new introduction to the second edition of Habits of the Heart is a very helpful reminder of the main points of the first edition. Moreover, it is very useful in situating, indeed resituating the book’s concerns, given the lapse of time since the book’s first appearance. It provides new insights made possible by second thoughts, as well as by the questions and criticisms of others. The problem of individualism and the slackening, not to say refusal, of traditional communal ties, has accelerat…Read more
  •  1
    L'atelier du traducteur
    Cahiers Internationaux de Symbolisme 92 53-60. 1999.
  •  18
    Evil and Dialectic
    Proceedings of the Hegel Society of America 11 159-182. 1992.
  •  53
    This book is a first-rate piece of work. It is wide ranging in its scope, yet finely attentive to detail. It covers with acumen and critical insight a large number of contemporary thinkers, and yet shows scholarly and philosophical finesse in reading Aristotle and recovering the contemporary significance of his views of technë and phronesis. It is elegantly written, and over its long unfolding maintains a very human voice.
  •  83
    Passage to Modernity (review)
    American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 70 (2): 298-300. 1996.
  •  117
    Hermeneutics and Hegel’s Aesthetics
    Irish Philosophical Journal 2 (2): 94-104. 1985.
  •  3
    Plato's Philosophical Art and the Identification of the Sophist
    Filosofia Oggi 2 (4): 393-403. 1979.
  •  47
    Introduction
    Ethical Perspectives 7 (1): 1-2. 2000.
    The contributions in the current issue of Ethical Perspectives mainly derive from a conference on Catholic Intellectual Traditions organized jointly by the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and the Erasmus Institute, University of Notre Dame, and held at Leuven from November 10th to the 11th, 2000. As the reader can see from a quick perusal of the table of contents, the contributions cover a diverse range of topics. The reader might well ask what such contributions have to do with a journal concern…Read more
  •  60
    Autonomia Turannos
    Ethical Perspectives 5 (4): 233-253. 1998.
    In modernity generally substantive conceptions of the good have been pervasively criticized, and not least in our own time. All values seem open to critique or question. Indeed, the claim is that they must be open to such critique if they are to pass muster — especially if we claim to live in an accountable, transparent, and democratic manner. Nevertheless, there seems to be one value that is accepted as basic in a widespread way. This is the value of freedom. The god who presides over the epoch…Read more