•  372
    Interdependence and Identity: Moral Relation in an Historical World
    Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 25 (2): 132-150. 2025.
    The twin concepts in the title will be introduced in the contexts of the philosophy of history and of philosophical personalism, as distinct from (though related to) their uses as logical and metaphysical categories. Overviews of varieties of philosophy of history and of basic principles I employ are foundations of the argument. Concepts, or ideas, in general have, I argue, real existence through the way that personal agents use them in creating the histories of human relations. I introduce a Pe…Read more
  •  1
    On Breaking Up Time, or, Perennialism as Philosophy of History
    Journal of the Philosophy of History 12 (1): 5-26. 2018.
    Current and recent philosophy of history contemplates a deep change in fundamental notions of the presence of the past. This is called breaking up time. The chief value for this change is enhancing the moral reach of historical research and writing. However, the materialist view of reality that most historians hold cannot support this approach. The origin of the notion in the thought of Walter Benjamin is suggested. I propose a neo-idealist approach called perennialism, centered on recurrent mor…Read more
  •  37
    Power and Compassion: On Moral Force Ethics and Historical Change bends philosophy of history and moral philosophy toward each other. The problem of the temporal span of moral life, first noticed and addressed by Kant as a hope and then made the center of philosophy by Hegel, was the center point of the canonical philosophy of history of the nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries. Its failure amidst the calamities and changes in culture and theory over during the twentieth century led to new…Read more
  •  724
    History’s Movement: The Historical Ontology in Social Ontology
    Revista de Teoria da História / Journal of Theory of History 28 (1): 1-19. 2025.
    Social ontology and the philosophy of history both concern themselves with human collectives. Social ontology is supposed to be theoretical, although the social sciences are supposed to be empirical. Philosophy of history is supposed to be theoretical, although historiography is supposed to be empirical. In fact, the a priori and the a posteriori mix in both theoretical and empirical endeavors in similar ways. Since the two endeavors hold part of their objects of inquiry in common, they should b…Read more
  • Touching Off a Moral Panic: The Case of Lord O.
    In Andrew Kettler & Will Tullett (eds.), The Routledge History of the Senses, Routledge. pp. 297-314. 2025.
    I develop the two pairs of ideas about the history of touch. The first concerns haptic events as non- verbal and haptic affect as deeply entangled meaning. We will consider historiographic interpretation in this line through the example of a far- reaching episode of misguided touch in 1781 and the micropolitics that ensued. I will also then develop the second pair of ideas— the anachronic and personhood— to theorize the historiography of touch out of its apparent ephemerality, unrepresentability…Read more
  •  353
    Historicity and Axiology: Temporal Implications for Axiology.
    Humanities Bulletin 8 (1): 57-73. 2025.
    To develop the axiology of moral (or ethical) values, phenomenological analysis must look at temporality in a way that is unfamiliar to it. This way is through knowledge and experience of the actual historical past, from which it has been separated by the Heideggerian conception of historicity and its classical Husserlian analysis of time consciousness. The development of historical studies helps to make this possible. A simple sample model of the diachronesis of the awareness of ethical signifi…Read more
  •  677
    Using a close reading of a single clause and its context in a section in A Pluralist Universe, we see the moral dangers James saw in traditional ontology, in particular its relation to war and peace. This analysis opens up James’s combining the personalist philosophy of his friend Borden Bowne (and others) with the pluralism he developed late in his career. This leads, further, to reflection of James’s performative philosophizing. Finding in James a theory of “pluralistic personalism” gives us a…Read more
  • All That We Are
    Aeon 23. 2024.
    The philosophy of personalism inspired Martin Luther King’s dream of a better world. We still need its hopeful ideas today
  •  568
    A Memoir of My Reading
    On_Culture 16 (16). 2024.
    Surveying nearly seven decades of habitual and obsessive reading, I consider how my character and psychology used reading to shape philosophical questions that move me into forms in which I could pursue them by reading. This became both the method and the substance of my philosophical work. It preserved some core emotional issues but also gave me the way to integrate them into scholarship and into my life.
  •  105
    Rich Addiction
    Subjectivity 31. 2024.
    Examining the author’s own experiences of narcotics addiction reveals certain aspects of the addicted mentality that have strong ethical valence. In general, this shows that addiction is not a state fundamentally characterized by lack. The rudiments of this position are found in some contemporary philosophy of addiction; also, it is contrasted with a common widely held mistaken view. Addiction should instead be understood in continuity with and as illuminating the nature of human personhood and …Read more
  •  741
    Shame and History
    Geschichtstheorie Am Werk. 2024.
    If history—our past, the sum of our thoughts, passions, and deeds—is so pervasive, influential, and meaningful, why then do we lose sight of it? Why do we not gain good values from it? And if it is part of our existential core, why then do we so often fail to ravel it into our deliberations? I propose that very often and to a great degree it is shame that separates us from history.
  •  729
    On Willing Surrender as Virtuous Self-Constitution
    Consecutio Rerum: Rivista Critica Della Postmodernità 14 199-217. 2024.
    Our cultural situation is to seek a moral form of self-constitution, rather than an ontological or epistemological foundation. Such a moral ground lies in the paradox of willing surrender of the will to do wrong or dysfunctional acts in order to enter temporally-extended processes of moral change. But the paradox of willing surrender of the will requires analysis. The propositional form of it cannot be sustained and must instead give way to willingness as an ongoing choice. The self-reflexivity …Read more
  •  86
    Two and One-Half Arguments for Idealism
    Idealistic Studies 52 (3): 225-243. 2022.
    John Foster, an Oxford analytical philosopher, and Borden Parker Bowne, the founder of “Boston Personalism” at the turn of the twentieth century both presented unique arguments for idealism that are deeply different from one another. Because neither is now well known, this paper lays out their reasoning as carefully and as clearly as possible, finding Bowne’s case for personalist idealism to be the stronger of the two in terms of ontology. But the inquiry is framed on the problems of the moral a…Read more
  •  1273
    This interdisciplinary volume connects the philosophy of history to moral philosophy with a unique focus on time. Taking in a range of intellectual traditions, cultural, and geographical contexts, the volume provides a rich tapestry of approaches to time, morality, culture, and history. By extending the philosophical discussion on the ethical importance of temporality, the editors disentangle some of the disciplinary tensions between analytical and hermeneutic philosophy of history, cultural the…Read more
  •  16
    Two and One-Half Arguments For Idealism
    Idealistic Studies 53 (2): 133-153. 2022.
    John Foster, an Oxford analytical philosopher, and Borden Parker Bowne, the founder of “Boston Personalism” at the turn of the twentieth century both presented unique arguments for idealism that are deeply different from one another. Because neither is now well known, this paper lays out their reasoning as carefully and as clearly as possible, finding Bowne’s case for personalist idealism to be the stronger of the two in terms of ontology. But the inquiry is framed on the problems of the moral a…Read more
  •  574
    No History to be Found: Denying Relations in the Name of Realism
    Epekeina: International Journal of Ontology History and Critics 14 (1): 1-22. 2022.
    Rejecting or reforming anthropocentrism for the sake of human survival is a central moral challenge in our time. The rejection of anthropocentrism relies on the view that anthropocentrism has pervasively constituted the historical character of humankind and must be replaced in the future as understood by historical theory. This critique arises from new realist ontologies, including neo-materialisms and object-oriented ontology. Their rigid rejection of anthropocentrism requires the view of histo…Read more
  •  101
    The problem of anthropocentrism and the human kind of personhood
    Sage Journals: Philosophy and Social Criticism. forthcoming.
    Philosophy & Social Criticism, Ahead of Print. Neither of the seemingly straightforward approaches of retaining the human at the top of the hierarchy of beings and of flattening human personhood solves the question of non-human personhood. But the concept of personhood does have the resources to address this issue, if we take it as a kind of moral agency. The way that humans develop moral agency through their temporality, historicity and community must be mapped onto the personhood of animals, b…Read more
  •  108
    The problem of anthropocentrism and the human kind of personhood
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 2022 (9): 1373-1393. 2022.
    Neither of the seemingly straightforward approaches of retaining the human at the top of the hierarchy of beings and of flattening human personhood solves the question of non-human personhood. But the concept of personhood does have the resources to address this issue, if we take it as a kind of moral agency. The way that humans develop moral agency through their temporality, historicity and community must be mapped onto the personhood of animals, but this is extremely difficult and must await m…Read more
  •  74
    The Same World for All of Us
    History and Theory 61 (2): 352-368. 2022.
    While much of Donald Bloxham's History and Morality is devoted to analyzing the evaluative processes of historians, Bloxham develops and relies on two strong philosophical concepts. The first is his claim that context must be understood as causality because a historical context is one of the causes of actions. Bloxham uses this to argue that historians must ascribe responsibility to past actors rather than blame their cultures. A wide critique of moral relativism emerges from this principle. The…Read more
  •  34
    Consider the Bristlecone Pine
    Borderland/Espacio Fronterizo/Espace Frontière. 2022.
    A short reflection on the permeability of our mental and physical boundaries based on the oldest known living plant, the Bristlecone Pine.
  •  105
    Unimpeded volition
    Metascience 31 (1): 137-139. 2021.
    Review of William of Ockham, Questions on Virtue, Goodness, and the Will, ed. and tr. Eric W. Hagedorn (Cambridge University Press, 2021), in Metascience (2021
  • Realist history does not meet many human needs. History needs a great deal more philosophy, but of what kind?
  •  917
    An Existential Philosophy of History
    Revista de Teoria da História / Journal of Theory of History 24 (1): 40-57. 2021.
    In this paper we delineate the conditions and features of what we call an existential philosophy of history in relation to customary trends in the field of the philosophy of history. We do this by circumscribing what a transgenerational temporality and what our entanglement in ethical relations with temporal others ask of us as existential and responsive selves and by explicating what attitude we need to have when trying to responsibly respond to other vulnerable beings in our historical world o…Read more
  •  599
    The question of the moral demands that humans, posthumans, and nonhumans in the Anthropocene put up on persons now living generally takes the form of supererogatory demands—that is, moral obligations with a perfectionist structure leading to obligations “above and beyond the call of duty” and extreme individual and collective sacrifice. David Roden construes this by deontology; Toby Ord, following Derek Parfit, by consequentualism. Such obligations are akin to the martyrdom of saints: but must o…Read more
  •  915
    Repairing Historicity
    Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 2 (16): 54-75. 2020.
    This paper advances a fresh theorization of historicity. The word and concept of historicity has become so widespread and popular that they have ceased to have definite meaning and are used to stand for unsupported notions of the values inherent in human experience. This paper attempts to repair the concept by re-defining it as the temporal aspect of the interdependence of life; having history is to have a life intertwined with the lives of all others and with the universe. After separating o…Read more
  •  830
    In this essay we consider the moral claims of one branch of non-realist theory known as linguistic narrativism theory. By highlighting the moral implications of linguistic narrativism theory, we argue that the “moral vision” expressed by this theory can entail, at worst, undesirable moral agnosticism if not related to a transcendental and supra-personal normativity in our moral life. With its appeal to volitionism and intuitionism, the ethical sensitivity of this theory enters into difficulties …Read more