•  5
    Whither Existential Psychotherapy?
    Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 22 (2): 93-97. 2015.
    Eric Craig invites us to participate in a conversation about existential psychotherapy, which I am pleased to join, and I am able to articulate my questions and disagreements only because he has provided such a clear presentation of the relevant issues. Craig argues two major points: 1) that existential psychotherapy, at least in the United States, has lost its grounding in ontology, and that it must recover that grounding; and 2) that the only adequate ontology for grounding existential psychot…Read more
  •  87
    From radical to banal evil: Hannah Arendt against the justification of the unjustifiable
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 12 (2): 129-158. 2004.
    Two central strands in Arendt's thought are the reflection on the evil of Auschwitz and the rethinking in terms of politics of Heidegger's critique of metaphysics. Given Heidegger's taciturnity regarding Auschwitz and Arendt's own taciturnity regarding the philosophical implications of Heidegger's political engagement in 1933, to set out how these strands interrelate is to examine the coherence of Arendt's thought and its potential for a critique of Heidegger. By refusing to countenance a theolo…Read more
  •  18
    Deconstruction
    Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3): 194-195. 2006.
  •  7
    Philosophical perspectives on technology and psychiatry (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2009.
    Our lives are dominated by technology. We live with and through the achievements of technology. What is true of the rest of life is of course true of medicine. Many of us owe our existence and our continued vigour to some achievement of medical technology. And what is true in a major way of general medicine is to a significant degree true of psychiatry. Prozac has long since arrived, and in its wake an ever-growing armamentarium of new psychotropics; beyond that, neuroscience promises ever m…Read more