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61Is it Happening? or, The Implications of ImmanenceResearch in Phenomenology 44 (3): 347-361. 2014.The most basic idea behind this essay is the reversal of Platonism in which the difference between the real world and this world becomes blurred. The reversal results in time being conceived as without beginning and without end. In other words, the blurred world is equivalent to what Husserl calls temporalization. According to Husserl, the structure of temporalization implies the limit between temporal phases cannot be determined. Therefore, the limit cannot be closed, and the temporal phases ne…Read more
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153Reality and Philosophy: Reflections on Cora Diamond's WorkPhilosophical Investigations 34 (4): 353-366. 2011.The publication of Cora Diamond's important 2002 “The Difficulty of Reality and the Difficulty of Philosophy” (in Philosophy and Animal Life) stimulated the writing of this essay. “The Difficulty of Reality and the Difficulty of Philosophy” attempted to show that there are experiences of reality (recounted especially in literature like John Coetzee's novels and Ted Hughes' poetry) in relation to which philosophical concepts and words encounter difficulty. The experiences resist conceptualization…Read more
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58What Immanence? What Transcendence? The Prioritization of Intuition Over Language in BergsonJournal of the British Society for Phenomenology 35 (1): 24-41. 2004.
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127Un ecart infime (part I): Foucault's critique of the concept of lived-experience ( vécu)Research in Phenomenology 35 (1): 11-28. 2005.In this essay, I start from Foucault's last text, his "Life: Experience and Science." Speaking of Canguilhem, Foucault makes a distinction between "le vécu" (lived-experience) and "le vivant" (the living). I then examine this difference between "le vécu" (lived-experience) and "le vivant" (the living); that is, I examine the different logics, we might say, of immanence that each concept implies. To do this, I reconstruct the "critique" that Foucault presents of the concept of vécu in the ninth c…Read more
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125Further Questions: A Way Out of the Present Philosophical Situation (via Foucault)Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 19 (1): 91-105. 2011.Let us begin by assembling some signs of the present philosophical situation. On the one hand, the most important living French philosopher, Alain Badiou, calls for a “return to Plato,” despite the movement of anti-Platonism that dominated French and German thought in the 20 th century. On the other hand, the present moment sees a resurgence of naturalism in philosophy in general (including and especially Anglophone analytic philosophy), despite the criticisms of naturalism that have appeared th…Read more
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108The implications of immanence: toward a new concept of lifeFordham University Press. 2006.The Implications of Immanence develops a philosophy of life in opposition to the notion of “bio-power,” which reduces the human to the question of power over what Giorgio Agamben terms “bare life,” mere biological existence. Breaking with all biologism or vitalism, Lawlor attends to the dispersion of death at the heart of life, in the “minuscule hiatus” that divides the living present, separating lived experience from the living body and, crucially for phenomenology, inserting a blind spot into …Read more
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Derrida and Husserl : The Basic Problem of Phenomenology, coll. « Studies in Continental Thought »Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 193 (2): 260-261. 2003.
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90Natalie Depraz: Transcendence et incarnation: Le statut de l'intersubectivite comme alterite a soi chez Husserl (review)Continental Philosophy Review 34 (1): 103-111. 2001.
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44Imagination and Chance: The Difference Between the Thought of Ricoeur and DerridaState University of New York Press. 1992.Imagination and Chance illuminates the different philosophical projects that animate Ricoeur’s hermeneutics and Derrida’s deconstruction. Basic concepts in Ricouer such as discourse, metaphor and symbol, and tradition are examined, and texts by Derrida including “White Mythology,” Introduction to Husserl’s The Origin of Geometry, and “The Double Session” are analyzed. The book also includes a previously untranslated round table discussion between Ricoeur and Derrida
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Phenomenology: responses and developmentsIn Alan D. Schrift (ed.), The History of Continental Philosophy, Routledge. 2014.After Husserl, the study of phenomenology took off in different directions. The ambiguity inherent in phenomenology - between conscious experience and structural conditions - lent itself to a range of interpretations. Many existentialists developed phenomenology as conscious experience to analyse ethics and religion. Other phenomenologists developed notions of structural conditions to explore questions of science, mathematics, and conceptualization. "Phenomenology: Responses and Developments" co…Read more
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170'Variación sexual benigna' : un ensayo sobre el pensamiento tardío de Merleau-PontyInvestigaciones Fenomenológicas 1 187. 2008.
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163The sensible universe seconded…: Comments on Mauro Carbone’s an unprecedented deformation: Proust and the sensible ideas: The SUNY Press, Albany, NY, 2010, ISBN: 1438430205, p 122, $23.95 (review)Continental Philosophy Review 45 (4): 569-578. 2012.
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Maurice Merleau-ponty: Husserl at the limits of phenomenology (edited book)Northwestern University Press. 2002.
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A new possibility of life: The experience of powerlessness as a solution to the problem of the worstStudia Philosophica 1. 2008.This essay is part of an attempt to determine a new mode of existence, an ethics, for humans. It consists in reversing the idea of the worst, which is unconditional “impassage”: “don’t let anyone in; don’t let anyone out!” As a reversal, the new mode of existence turns us into friends of passage, a people who love the world so much that they will let everyone without exception enter and let everyone without exception exit. They say, “Let’s tear down all the wall and open all the doors!” The reve…Read more