Oskar Gruenwald

Institute for Interdisciplinary Research
  •  3
    The Third Yugoslavia
    Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 10 (1-2): 115-141. 1998.
    This essay offers hope that beyond the specter and tragedy of the Yugoslav civil war lie the prospects for peace, democratization, economic and political reconstruction, and the evolution of a democratic Third Yugoslavia. But, to realize this hope, there is a need for the development of a genuine civic culture and civil society in the Yugoslav successor states based on democratic values, pluralism, and tolerance, rooted in the conception of universal human rights, constitutionalism, and equality…Read more
  •  12
    Taming the Digital Behemoth
    Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 32 (1-2): 1-16. 2020.
    This essay explores the digital challenge, how to humanize technology, and the need to rethink the digital-human divide. This is imperative in view of superintelligent Al, which may escape human control. The information age poses quandaries regarding the uses and abuses of technology. A major critique concerns the commercial design of digital technologies that engenders compulsive behavior. All technologies affect humans in a reciprocal way. The new digital technologies-from smartphones to the I…Read more
  •  4
    The Promise of the Liberal Arts
    Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 31 (1-2): 1-10. 2019.
  • The American Promise
    Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 30 (1-2): 1-3. 2018.
  • The Postmodern Challenge
    Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 28 (1-2): 1-18. 2016.
    The thesis of this essay is that the central postmodern challenge is to recover stable, objective normative standards that presuppose cultural renewal and liberal arts education building on the classical paideia of educating the whole person. Humans possess an innate moral sense that requires nurturing and developing to encompass both résumé and eulogy virtues as proposed by David Brooks’ The Road to Character. Wisdom-seeking traditions aim at self-mastery, but need tempering by neo-Kantian epis…Read more
  • God, Nature and Freedom (Editorial)
    Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 27 (1-2): 1-4. 2015.
  •  4
    The Quest for Meaning and Redemption (Editorial)
    Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 29 (1-2): 1-3. 2017.
  •  5
    Philosophy Redivivus?
    The Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 36 86-92. 1998.
    Curiously, in the late twentieth century, even agnostic cosmologists like Stephen Hawking—who is often compared with Einstein—pose metascientific questions concerning a Creator and the cosmos, which science per se is unable to answer. Modern science of the brain, e.g. Roger Penrose's Shadows of the Mind, is only beginning to explore the relationship between the brain and the mind-the physiological and the epistemic. Galileo thought that God's two books-Nature and the Word-cannot be in conflict, …Read more
  •  10
    Letters to the Editor
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 70 (2): 155-165. 1996.
  •  9
    Letters to the Editor
    with Byron L. Haines, John Pepple, and Helmut Wautischer
    Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 67 (4). 1994.
  •  31
    The Concept of Alienation in Avant-garde Yugoslav Marxism
    International Philosophical Quarterly 17 (2): 195-218. 1977.
  •  40
    The Essential Solzhenitsyn
    Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 55 (2): 137-152. 1980.