Stanford University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1993
New York City, New York, United States of America
  •  52
    Heidegger on Correspondence and Correctness
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 28 (2): 103-116. 2007.
  •  124
    Dennett on seeming
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 6 (1-2): 99-106. 2007.
    Dennett’s eliminativist theory of consciousness rests on an implausible reduction of sensory seeming to cognitive judgment. The “heterophenomenological” testimony to which he appeals in urging that reduction poses no threat to phenomenology, but merely demonstrates the conceptual indeterminacy of small-scale sensory appearances. Phenomenological description is difficult, but the difficulty does not warrant Dennett’s neo-Cartesian claim that there is no such thing as seeming at all as distinct fr…Read more
  •  22
    Sensation, judgment, and the phenomenal field
    In Taylor Carman & Mark B. N. Hansen (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Merleau-Ponty, Cambridge University Press. pp. 50--73. 2005.
  •  295
  •  30
    Heidegger’s Philosophy of Art (review)
    Philosophical Review 112 (4): 575-580. 2003.
    This book is probably the best comprehensive treatment of Heidegger’s philosophy of art currently available in English. A little over a third of the volume deals with the most widely read and discussed of Heidegger’s texts concerning art, the 1936 essay, “The Origin of the Work of Art.” The remaining hundred pages or so then go beyond that familiar territory into many other sources, including Heidegger’s lectures on Hölderlin and Nietzsche, his later essays on poetry and language, and his occasi…Read more
  •  20
    The Conspicuousness of Signs in « Being and Time »
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 22 (3): 158-169. 1991.
  • Cambridge University Presscarman, Taylor. 2005.