•  7
    Drawing on phenomenology and everyday affective encounters of grieving, befriending, rearing, and bonding, Flakne warns against the disorientation and division implicit in what we think we mean by common sense. Instead, she invites us to relearn sensing together as key to an inevitable ethics of interembodiment.
  •  24
    Can Facts Survive? Lies and the Complicity of Common Sense
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 34 (4): 545-560. 2020.
    ABSTRACT Can “facts” survive the advent of modern political practices of lying? This essay revisits Arendt's “Truth and Politics” to explore this question. Arendt ties the fate of facts closely to that of common sense, which both depends upon facts and is charged with combating the lies that would assault not only individual facts but factuality itself. Arendt hewed closely to our two major philosophical traditions of common sense. While she recognized the ways in which common sense as koine ais…Read more
  • Issues in phenomenology
    with John K. Oconnor, Adam S. Miller, and Chad Engelland
    Philosophy Today 51 14-49. 2007.
  •  37
    Embodied and Embedded
    Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 10 (1): 37-63. 2005.
    Sunaisthesis is a generally overlooked or misconstrued concept central to Aristotle’s philosophy of friendship, and therefore to his entire ethical and politicalproject. As opposed to Stoic uses that presuppose ethical self-relation, in Aristotle’s coinage, sunaisthesis indicates the genesis of a self-relation mediated through the friend. Both the “merged selves” and the “mirrored selves” approaches to Aristotelian friendship distort this peculiar mediation. Through a close reading of relevant t…Read more
  •  17
    Thinking Deleuze Otherwise
    Philosophy Today 54 (Supplement): 187-192. 2010.
  •  4
    Julia Kristeva, Hannah Arendt: Life is Narrative Reviewed by
    Philosophy in Review 21 (5): 344-346. 2001.
  •  96
    : Judgment -- Moral and ethical aspects. The application of "thick" ethical concepts is best understood as a process of reflective rather than deductive judgment. Taking the form "B is as X as A," where X is a thick ethical concept and A and B are narrative wholes unified through X (for example, "Those who hid Jews from the Nazis were as brave as Achilles"), reflective judgment opens thick ethical concepts to transformation. Though interpretive, such reflective judgment may still be able to prov…Read more
  •  8
    Contac/Improv
    Philosophy Today 51 (Supplement): 42-49. 2007.
  • Julia Kristeva, Hannah Arendt: Life is Narrative (review)
    Philosophy in Review 21 344-346. 2001.
  •  22
    The application of “thick” ethical concepts is best understood as a process of reflective rather than deductive judgment. Taking the form “B is as X as A,” where X is a thick ethical concept and A and B are narrative wholes unified through X, reflective judgment opens thick ethical concepts to transformation. Though interpretive, such reflective judgment may still be able to provide validity without recourse to “thin,” purportedly context-neutral terms.
  •  5
    Contac/Improv
    Philosophy Today 51 (Supplement): 42-49. 2007.
  •  21
    No Longer and Not Yet
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 21 (2): 153-175. 1999.
    In The Human Condition, Hannah Arendt quotes from Antigone: “But great words, counteracting the great blows of the overproud, teach understanding in old age.” She quotes Sophocles to exemplify the original, pre-philosophical and even pre-polis belonging together of words and deeds. She then cautions: “The content of these lines is so puzzling to modern understanding that one rarely finds a translator who dares to give the bare sense.”