• S.A.D. Sisters: Caputo's last women
    Existentia 12 (3-4): 295-305. 2002.
  • Ethik, Recht Und Billigkeit
    Jahrbuch 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
  •  8
    Review of Laszlo Tengelyi, The Wild Region in Life-History (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (12). 2004.
  •  16
    This paper concerns Hegel’s much-neglected discussion of the rational observation of nature in the first part of the chapter on reason in the Phenomenology of Spirit. The paper focuses, in particular, on the themes of nature’s inexhaustibilit y, animal life’s holistic character, and the earth’s individual distinctiveness insofar as Hegel appeals to them to challenge a certain kind of self-understanding of what it means to observe nature rationally. In addition to examining the significance and t…Read more
  •  111
    Morning Hours, or Lectures on God's Existence
    with Moses Mendelssohn and Corey W. Dyck
    Springer. 2011.
    Morning Hours is the first English translation of Morgenstunden by Moses Mendelssohn, the foremost Jewish thinker of the German Enlightenment. Published six months before Mendelssohn's death on January 4, 1786, Morning Hours is the most sustained presentation of his mature epistemological and metaphysical views, all elaborated in the service of presenting his son with proofs for the existence of God. But Morning Hours is much more than a theoretical treatise. It also plays a central role in t…Read more
  •  20
    Analytischer Kommentar zu Hegels Phänomenologie des Geistes (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 38 (1): 139-140. 1984.
    Commentaries on Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit are hardly novel. Several attempts exist to supply readers with sometimes critical, sometimes historical explanations of difficult passages and transitions and occasionally with an interpretation of the work as a whole. Curiously German scholars, unlike their French and English speaking counterparts, had not produced an extensive commentary before the appearance of Scheier's impressive undertaking. Rightly convinced that neither its architectonic n…Read more
  •  28
    The Status of Dispositions
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 88 1-12. 2014.
    This paper addresses puzzling issues concerning the ontological status of dispositions. Following review of debates about a traditional conditional analysis as well as Lewis’s “reformed conditional analysis” of dispositions, the paper analyzes attempts to solve the problem of what makes the relevant conditional true. Reasons are presented for rejecting attempts to locate the relevant truth-maker in a causal basis that allegedly dispenses with dispositions or in properties that are universally di…Read more
  •  35
    Hegel on Logic and Religion (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 48 (2): 395-397. 1994.
    This engaging work explores how Hegel's philosophy both entails and is entailed by a certain conception of Christianity. What distinguishes Burbidge's exploration is the emphasis that he places on an interpretation of Hegel's logic, in which a central role is assigned to the understanding. The first set of essays elaborates the operation of the understanding in relation to the operations of dialectic and speculative reason in Hegel's logic. The first essay concentrates on Hegel's attempt to disp…Read more
  •  88
    Negation and Being
    Review of Metaphysics 64 (2): 247-271. 2010.
  •  20
    The Genesis of Heidegger's Being and Time (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 48 (4): 902-904. 1995.
    The "conceptual story" told by Kisiel neatly divides into three parts, reflecting the genesis of SZ respectively "as a topic, as a program, and as a text". Part 1 begins with the 1919 War Emergency Semester and Heidegger's transformation of Husserlian phenomenology into a "pretheoretical science" of pretheoretical origins, leading to the elaboration of a hermeneutics of facticity and its methodological problematic in concert with the demands of a phenomenology of religion. Part 1 is the lengthie…Read more
  •  20
    Heidegger's Heritage
    Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 59 (4). 2003.
    There are several difficulties, largely the product of the distinctive question and paths of Heidegger's thinking, that beset any attempt to determine his philosophical heritage. In the first part of the following paper, after reviewing these difficulties, the author argues that Heidegger is, nonetheless, singularly and quite rightly preoccupied with the heritage of his thinking. In the second part an attempt is made to show how a particular understanding of being, namely, being as presence and …Read more
  •  53
    Love, Honor, and Resentment
    The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 11 179-192. 2001.
    For much of contemporary ethical theory, the universalizability of the motive of a contemplated action forms a necessary part of the basis of the action’s moral character, legitimacy, or worth. Considering the possibility of resentment springing from the performance of an action also serves as a means of determining the morality of an action. However, considerations of universalizability and resentment are plainly inconsistent with the performance of some unselfish moral actions. I argue that th…Read more
  •  10
  •  74
    Interpreting Heidegger: Critical Essays (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2011.
    This volume of essays by internationally prominent scholars interprets the full range of Heidegger's thought and major critical interpretations of it. It explores such central themes as hermeneutics, facticity and Ereignis, conscience in Being and Time, freedom in the writings of his period of transition from fundamental ontology, and his mature criticisms of metaphysics and ontotheology. The volume also examines Heidegger's interpretations of other authors, the philosophers Aristotle, Kant and …Read more
  •  17
    Report of the Secretary
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 60 253-255. 1986.
  •  22
    The aim of this crisply written study is to elaborate and criticize the basic direction of the third section of the first part of Heidegger's Sein und Zeit, the unfinished but, as it were, systematic center of the entire project. Köhler undertakes this ambitious project with the help of lectures held right after the completion of Sein und Zeit as well as the lectures of the winter semester of 1925/26. In these lectures the works of Scheler and Kant figure significantly and Köhler, accordingly, d…Read more
  •  87
    Hegel’s Science of Logic and Idea of Truth
    Idealistic Studies 13 (1): 33-49. 1983.
    To criticize a philosopher’s views properly a primary requirement is an accurate understanding of the questions he raises, the problems he acknowledges, and the procedures he follows. In the following study I attempt to identify the specific question of truth which Hegel addresses, the basis of the sort of skepticism posing a serious threat to its resolution, and finally a strategy he adopts. The specific question of truth for Hegel is a question of metaphysical truth or, in the Cartesian terms …Read more
  •  40
    Comments on Andrew Feenberg’s Heidegger and Marcuse
    Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 9 (3): 52-61. 2006.
  •  31
    Volume Introduction
    The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 8 13-25. 2000.
  •  38
    Panofsky and the Foundations of Art History (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 40 (3): 579-580. 1987.
    Challenging art historians' scientific pretensions as well as their neglect of theoretical questions, the author traces art history's development from the turn of the century by critically reviewing the early and lesser known writings of Erwin Panofsky, "the most influential art historian in the twentieth century." In a brief sketch of art history's nineteenth century roots, the first chapter reviews what is retained and what is discarded in Hegel's, Burckhardt's, and Dilthey's successive concep…Read more
  •  25
    Hegel's Encyclopaedia Logic constitutes the foundation of the system of philosophy presented in his Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical Sciences. Together with his Science of Logic, it contains the most explicit formulation of his enduringly influential dialectical method and of the categorical system underlying his thought. It offers a more compact presentation of his dialectical method than is found elsewhere, and also incorporates changes that he would have made to the second edition of the Sc…Read more
  •  9
    The Role and responsibility of the moral philosopher (edited book)
    with Desmond J. FitzGerald and John Thomas Noonan
    National Office of the American Catholic Philosophical Association, Catholic University of America. 1982.
    Proceedings of the Fifty-sixth Annual Meeting of the American Catholic Philosophical Association, held in Houston, Tex., Apr. 16-18, 1982. Includes bibliographical references.
  •  24
    Heidegger's Last Word
    Review of Metaphysics 41 (3). 1988.
  •  4
    Moses Mendelssohn: Philosophical Writings (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 1997.
    Mendelssohn's Philosophical Writings, published in 1761, bring the metaphysical tradition to bear on the topic of 'sentiments'. Mendelssohn offers a nuanced defence of Leibniz's theodicy and conception of freedom, an examination of the ethics of suicide, an account of the 'mixed sentiments' so central to the tragic genre, a hypothesis about weakness of will, an elaboration of the main principles and types of art, a definition of sublimity and analysis of its basic forms, and, lastly, a brief tra…Read more
  •  15
    Heidegger's deliberations
    Research in Phenomenology 30 (1): 254-259. 2000.