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57The Transcendental How (review)Review of Metaphysics 48 (3): 663-665. 1995.This well-informed and perceptive study of Kant's theoretical philosophy aims at presenting "how Kant thought that transcendental philosophy can be established, and how he in fact tried to accomplish his task". After indicating the metaphilosophical motivations underlying the study, the author focuses primarily on the transcendental deduction as presented in the second edition of the Critique of Pure Reason. The study itself is divided into three parts. In the first part Kant's philosophical mot…Read more
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88The Nineteenth Meeting of the Internationale Hegel-Gesellschaft, Nürnberg, April 30 to May 2, 1992The Owl of Minerva 24 (1): 121-122. 1992.This meeting of the Hegel-Gesellschaft featured forty-six papers, including those presented during the two plenary sessions, covering a wide range of topics within the theme of the congress. The congress was ably administered and hosted by Dr. Wolfgang Sünkel at the University of Erlangen-Nürnberg in Nürnberg. As usual, the congress was heavily represented by scholars from Eastern Europe and by scholars working at the Hegel-Archiv in Bochum. The contingent from the United States included Howard …Read more
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Ethik, Recht Und BilligkeitJahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik 5. 1997.The first part of this essay contests traditional objections to Kant's derivation of the law of right from the moral law, objections based upon the formalism and subjectivism that are inherent in Kant's formulation of the latter. Through a reconstruction of that derivation in syllogistic form, the nature and extent of the empirical presupposition underlying Kant's doctrine of right - furnishing it with a kind of content and natural objectivity - are made perspicuous. After noting the multiple us…Read more
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101Internationale Hegel-Gesellschaft, Debrecen and BudapestThe Owl of Minerva 26 (1): 110-110. 1994.Over a hundred scholars from as far away as Tokyo, New York, and Buenos Aires, participated in the twentieth congress of the Internationale Hegel-Gesellschaft held in Debrecen and Budapest, Hungary, from August 24 to August 28, 1994, on the theme: Vernunft in der Geschichte? Among those addressing the Debrecen portion of the congress were Agnes Heller, Manfred Riedel, Shlomo Avineri, Walter Jaeschke, and Ludwig Siep. Howard Kainz of Marquette University also gave a well received paper in Debrece…Read more
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The Critique of Pure Reason and Continental philosophy: Heidegger's interpretation of transcendental imaginationIn Paul Guyer (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
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113Hegel's questionable legacyResearch in Phenomenology 32 (1): 3-25. 2002.This paper suggests that Hegel's legacy is precisely the questionability of any attempt to put it in question. Derrida's acknowledgment of différance's "absolute proximity" to Hegel's notion of Aufhebung is an admission of this difficulty and an insistence, nevertheless, on disestablishing Hegel's thinking. Part one reviews four Hegelian legacies, summed up in the notion of Aufhebung: a suspicion of immediacy, a presumption of the fully mediated character of reality, a decentering of subjectivit…Read more
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38Review of Nikolas Kompridis (ed.), Philosophical Romanticism (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (10). 2006.
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Rationality, Anthropomorphism, And Hegel's Metaphysics Of Nature: Remarks On Alison Stone's Petrified IntelligenceBulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 51 13-21. 2005.
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72Wild and Mild: Heidegger on Human Liberation and the Essence of HistoryInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies 22 (4): 569-582. 2014.In the late 1930s Heidegger makes allusions to?the wild? and?the mild? in connection with a human liberation that he understands as a steadfast response to the claim that historical being (Seyn) makes upon us. The following paper elucidates these allusions in terms of the overturning of metaphysics that they entail.
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11Heidegger and Marcuse: The Catastrophe and Redemption of HistoryNotre Dame Philosophical Reviews. forthcoming.
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134Temptation, Self-Possession, and Resoluteness: Heidegger's Reading of Confessions X and What Is the Good of Being and Time?Research in Phenomenology 39 (2): 248-265. 2009.In Heidegger's 1921 lectures, he presents an extensive interpretation of Book Ten of Augustine's Confessions. The present paper elaborates parallels between that interpretation of Augustine's Confessions and Heidegger's interpretation of existence in Being and Time, with special reference to the themes of self-possession and resoluteness as respective anchors of the two interpretations. The study also highlights ways the two interpretations diverge, i.e., the aspects of the interpretation of the…Read more
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