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4The Genuine Possibility of Being-with: Watsuji, Heidegger, and the Primacy of BetweennessComparative and Continental Philosophy 11 (1): 7-18. 2019.In Rinrigaku, Watsuji Tetsurō criticizes Martin Heidegger's Being and Time for taking as its starting point the standpoint of the individual “I.” For Watsuji, this “I” is an abstraction, and starting from it leads the phenomenologist to neglect the more fundamental standpoint of the person who is deeply engaged in social activities. In this paper, I explain that Watsuji's criticism is helpful in shedding light on Heidegger's failure to connect hermeneutic phenomenology to ethics in Being and Tim…Read more
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733Why Natural Language Processing is Not Reading: Two Philosophical Distinctions and their Educational ImportJournal of Applied Hermeneutics 2025. 2025.This paper explores two important ways in which the practice of close reading differs from the technique of natural language processing, the use of computer programming to decode, process, and replicate messages within a human language. It does so in order to highlight distinctive features of close reading that are not replicated by natural language processing. The first point of distinction concerns the nature of the meaning generated in each case. While natural language processing proceeds on …Read more
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151Shared Understanding Before Semantic Agreement: Gadamer on the Hidden Ground of Linguistic CommunityJournal of the British Society for Phenomenology 56 (1): 57-69. 2024.Hans-Georg Gadamer argues that language is the medium of all understanding and thus that it is the medium through which we can reach understanding with one another. Yet many today are sceptical of this claim and worry that Gadamerian hermeneutics ignores at its own peril the limits of the particular discourses that people utilize to reach understanding with one another. I argue here that this criticism rests on the assumption that, for Gadamer, it is the semantic features of a language alone tha…Read more
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54Gadamer and the social turn in epistemologyState University of New York Press. 2024.Explores Gadamer's hermeneutic theory of understanding and puts this theory into conversation with a number of social epistemologies, including feminist epistemology.
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725Lawrence J. Hatab's Proto-Phenomenology, Language Acquisition, Orality, and Literacy: Dwelling in Speech, Vol. IIGatherings: The Heidegger Circle Annual 11 280-289. 2021.
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915Play in Conversation: The Cognitive Import of Gadamer's Theory of PlayIn Chad Engelland (ed.), Language and Phenomenology, Routledge. pp. 248-263. 2020.This chapter presents a conception of understanding where understanding emerges out of the joint experience of conversation. On this conception, understanding requires more than the pre-reflective acquisition of shared social meanings – a conception of understanding historically highlighted by existential phenomenologists. Beyond this, it requires what occurs in genuine conversation, namely, that one put one’s pre-reflective social meanings at risk in the process of critical self-reflection. Dra…Read more
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909The Hermeneutic Situation of Thought as a Hermeneutic PrincipleIn Cynthia Nielsen & Greg Lynch (eds.), Truth and Method: A Polyphonic Commentary, Rowman and Littlefield International. pp. 143-164. 2022.There are two attitudes regarding the historical situation of understanding commonly held today. On the one hand, we believe that we only achieve a real, worthwhile understanding of a topic when our thinking manages to break free from the dogmas of the past. We believe that this transcendence of the historical situation of thought is both possible and desirable. We applaud those whose thought appears to us to proceed unhinged by traditional dogmas, whether those dogmas be old habits of scientifi…Read more
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2355Gadamer's Concept of LanguageIn Theodore D. George & Gert-Jan van der Heiden (eds.), The Gadamerian Mind, Routledge. pp. 127-138. 2021.This chapter presents Gadamer’s conception of language and of its role in the process of understanding. The chapter begins by explaining what Gadamer means when he says that language is characterized by an essential “self-forgetfulness” [Selbstvergessenheit] and how this relates to his account of the fore-structure of the understanding. Next, it explains what it means to conceive of a linguistic presentation (e.g., a poem or a lecture) as a hermeneutic event and how this conceptualization is ess…Read more
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817Testimonial Justice Beyond BeliefEpoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 27 (2): 317-330. 2023.This article examines the meaningful intervention that Gert-Jan Van der Heiden’s recent book, The Voice of Misery: A Continental Philosophy of Testimony, makes in the developing field of the philosophy of testimony. I argue that this intervention is accomplished through a phenomenological investigation into the nature of the testimonial object and of the demand that it makes upon one who bears witness. In taking such an approach, I argue, Van der Heiden initiates an ontological turn in the field…Read more
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68Walker Percy, Phenomenology, and the Mystery of LanguageIn Leslie Marsh (ed.), Walker Percy, Philosopher, Springer Verlag. pp. 41-61. 2018.In his theoretical essays on language, Walker Percy criticizes contemporary linguistics for overlooking the deep, existential impact that language acquisition has on human life. This acquisition, for Percy, radically transforms the human being’s mode of existence. With the acquisition of language, the world and our role in it change. The meaning of the world comes to be revealed through the ongoing life of human discourse: through books, conversations, philosophical inquiry, and so on. This chap…Read more
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115Reciprocal MirroringPhilosophy Today 1 (61): 53-57. 2017.On May 19th, 1958, the day after Martin Heidegger and Shin’ichi Hisamatsu led a one-day colloquium in Freiburg on the topic of “Art and Thinking,” the two men came together to discuss the success of the colloquium. The conversation soon turned to the work of Paul Klee, the Swiss artist, and from there to the newest developments in Heidegger’s thinking about language. Heidegger had just presented some of this new thinking during his lecture on Stefan George’s poem “Das Wort” in Vienna a week earl…Read more
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150Art and ThinkingPhilosophy Today 1 (61): 47-51. 2017.On May 18, 1958, Martin Heidegger led a one-day colloquium in Freiburg on the topic of “Art and Thinking” together with Shin’ichi Hisamatsu, the Japanese philosopher and Buddhist scholar. The protocol of the colloquium, published in volume 16 of Heidegger’s Gesamtausgabe, presents a conversation among the colloquium participants about art in the East Asian world. In this conversation, Heidegger is particularly interested in hearing from Hisamatsu about the conception of art present in the East A…Read more
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858The Genuine Possibility of Being-with: Watsuji, Heidegger, and the Primacy of BetweennessTandf: Comparative and Continental Philosophy 11 (1): 7-18. 2019.Volume 11, Issue 1, March 2019, Page 7-18.
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1299Words Underway: Continental Philosophy of LanguageRowman & Littlefield International. 2019.This book examines the central role that language plays in understanding and human flourishing. The book begins by exploring Heidegger's idea that language is an essential element of how we dwell in the world and is, for the most part, ready-to-hand for us. With Gadamer, I then begin to explore phenomena where language is not ready-to-hand but calls for interpretation. The latter half of the book explores distinct ways in which language can become unready-to-hand for individuals (e.g., in cases …Read more
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118The Task of Ordinary Mind: Rethinking Authenticity through the MumonkanComparative and Continental Philosophy 2 (1): 91-104. 2010.This essay explores the nature of authenticity through a comparison of Martin Heidegger and the classical Buddhist text, the Mumonkan (The Gateless Gate). As Stanley Cavell's interpretations of Heidegger have developed, the peculiarity of Heidegger's sense of authenticity lies in the fact that it requires us, not to negate the inauthentic everydayness into which we are fallen, but to learn to inhabit this everydayness in a new way. The task of authenticity, Cavell argues, involves a recovery and…Read more
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69Johanna Oksala: Feminist Experiences: Foucauldian and Phenomenological Investigations: Northwestern University Press, Evanston, IL, 2016, $32.95 pbk, 158 pp + index (review)Human Studies 40 (1): 151-156. 2017.
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1510My Language Which Is Not My OwnSouthwest Philosophy Review 32 (2): 115-136. 2016.Language is often conceived of today as providing a person with a worldview and a set of communicative norms that one accepts unambiguously. However, in his 1992 lecture, “Monolingualism of the Other,” Jacques Derrida insists that his mother tongue is for him “not a natural element, not the transparency of the ether, but an absolute habitat.” In other words, while French is an intimate part of his existence, his relationship to it is nevertheless ambiguous. Derrida claims that his situation is n…Read more
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227The ethics of relationality: Judith Butler and social critiqueContinental Philosophy Review 46 (3): 449-463. 2013.This article takes up the work of Judith Butler in order to present a vision of ethics that avoids two common yet problematic positions: on the one hand, the skeptical position that ethical norms are so constitutive of who we are that they are ultimately impossible to assess and, on the other hand, the notion that we are justified in our commitment to any ethical norm that appears foundational to our identity. With particular attention to the trajectory of Butler’s project from The Psychic Life …Read more
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127The Omnipotent Word of Medical Diagnosis and the Silence of Depression: An Argument for Kristeva's Therapeutic ApproachInternational Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 9 (1): 1-26. 2016.In cases of depression where linguistic meaning has collapsed, there is good reason to believe that a long-term strategy for recovery must include rehabilitating the depressive person's capacity for meaningful speech. This requires that the patient participate actively in interpreting her own pain. In this essay, I argue that medical diagnosis can tempt patients, particularly women, to circumvent this process of interpretation. To explain this danger, I draw on Julia Kristeva's clinical analyses…Read more
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Areas of Specialization
| Hans-Georg Gadamer |
| Continental Philosophy |
| Hermeneutics, Misc |
| 20th Century Philosophy |