•  12
    The Focality of Maintenance and the Making of Home
    Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 29 (2-3): 149-175. 2025.
    In this article, I explore how our engagement with the technological materiality of our homes promotes or disrupts healthy relationships with natural and built environments. I will argue that committing to certain home maintenance practices has the potential to overcome, what Albert Borgmann (1984) calls, “the device paradigm.” I begin by outlining Martin Heidegger’s (1971) fears about modern technologies and how he sees them undermining our relationships with a dynamic, more-than-human world. I…Read more
  •  68
    Environmental Ignorance
    Radical Philosophy Review 23 (2): 299-329. 2020.
    I argue that environmental ignorance is a group-based form of substantive ignorance that is analogous to race-based ignorance, showing that they are structurally and functionally similar and sometimes overlap. While race theorists offer promising solutions toward eliminating race-based ignorance, I argue that something far more is needed in the environmental case. I turn to panpsychism as a possible solution. Though I conclude that it is too radical for most Americans to willingly embrace, I inc…Read more
  •  30
    Losing Trace in advance
    Environmental Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Drawing on Forrest Clingerman’s work in environmental hermeneutics, I explore the technological mediation of nature apps and social media, particularly as they shape experiences of place and memory. I argue that in significantly undermining one’s capacity to experience the natural environment aesthetically, one’s memory of place is similarly undermined. Losing this trace of place in memory, one’s sense of being in the world is transformed. That is, by using digital technologies to navigate natur…Read more
  •  61
    Thinking Against the Wrath of Capital
    Hypatia 29 (3): 695-701. 2014.
  •  22
    The Focality of Maintenance and the Making of Home
    Techné Research in Philosophy and Technology 29. 2025.
    In this article, I explore how our engagement with the technological materiality of our homes promotes or disrupts healthy relationships with natural and built environments. I will argue that committing to certain home maintenance practices has the potential to overcome, what Albert Borgmann (1984) calls, “the device paradigm.” I begin by outlining Martin Heidegger’s (1971) fears about modern technologies and how he sees them undermining our relationships with a dynamic, more-than-human world. I…Read more
  •  86
    An Environmental Ethic of Home
    Environment, Space, Place 14 (2): 28-60. 2022.
    Abstract:In this paper, I argue that our lives are situated in territories of natural and built environments that should be included in our conceptions of home. I maintain that this expanded conception is indispensable for an environmental ethic that is both well- grounded and practically efficacious. Thus, I take a serious look at the things, places, and others that ought to be included in our concept of home.In the first section I discuss persistent problems for dominant theories of environmen…Read more