•  7
    This dissertation reads Levinas’s theory of time as prolegomena to any future ethics of alterity. For an ethics of alterity to be possible, two mutually opposing conditions must obtain. On the one hand, ethical laws must proceed from a fully heteronomous source which absolves itself from any conceptual mediation. On the other hand, such laws must acquire meaning within the mental economy of an ego for whom everything is conceptually mediated. Levinas’s goal is, accordingly, to investigate the me…Read more
  •  132
    Levinas’s Return to Platonic Semantics
    Studia Phaenomenologica 26 301-326. 2026.
    Levinas repeatedly calls his thought in the 1960s a “return to Platonism.” Whereas most scholars read this statement as part of Levinas’s critique of multiculturalism and moral relativism, I look at Levinas’s Platonism on its own terms as a theory of meaning. Levinas offers a tridimensional theory of meaning based on two kinds of Platonic “separation” (chorismos): (1) a separation between historical variability and ethical universality, corresponding to the relation between sensibles and forms (…Read more
  •  1514
    Levinas on Separation: Metaphysical, Semantic, Affective
    Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 28 (2): 429-452. 2024.
    In this paper I argue that, to conceive transcendence, Levinas retrieves the Platonic concept of “separation” and deploys it in three ways: metaphysically, semantically, and affectively. Levinas finds in the interaction between being and the Good beyond being of Republic VI 509b a certain “formal structure of transcendence”—one in which a term is conditioned by another while remaining absolutely separated from it. This formal structure is subsequently deployed metaphysically, in the relation bet…Read more
  •  1078
    Peirce’s Imaginative Community: On the Esthetic Grounds of Inquiry
    Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 58 (1): 1-21. 2022.
    Departing from Anderson’s (2016) suggestion that there are three communities in Peirce’s thought corresponding to his three normative sciences of logic, ethics, and esthetics, I argue that these communities partake in a relationship of dependence similar to that found among the normative sciences. In this way, just as logic relies on ethics which relies on esthetics, so too would a logical community of inquirers rely on an ethical community of love, which would rely on an esthetic community of a…Read more
  •  888
    Teleology and Nous in Plotinus’s Ennead 6.7
    Kriterion: Journal of Philosophy 61 (147): 609-632. 2020.
    In this paper, I argue that Plotinus’s critique of divine deliberation in Ennead 6.7 does not seek to banish teleology altogether from his philosophy of nature. Rather, his critique aims to situate teleology within his own metaphysical system so as to reconcile it with the basic principles governing the intelligible universe. In this sense, Plotinus does not propose that we expunge all reference to notions of utility and benefit from our natural explanations; he merely wishes to render those not…Read more
  •  2470
    Freedom and Praxis in Plotinus’s Ennead 6.8.1-6
    Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 30. 2020.
    In this paper, I argue that Plotinus does not limit the sphere of free human agency simply to intellectual contemplation, but rather extends it all the way to human praxis. Plotinus’s goal in the first six chapters of Ennead 6.8 is, accordingly, to demarcate the space of freedom within human practical actions. He ultimately concludes that our external actions are free whenever they actualize, in unhindered fashion, the moral principles derived from intellectual contemplation. This raises the que…Read more