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80On the Conversion of Philosophy: The Problems and Promise of Emmanuel Falque’s Theology of PhilosophyHeythrop Journal 62 (1): 75-84. 2021.The Heythrop Journal, EarlyView.
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47Levinas’s Readings of Husserl’s Lectures on Time ConsciousnessLevinas Studies 17 131-148. 2023.Emmanuel Levinas identifies Husserl’s lectures on the internal consciousness of time as of central phenomenological importance. However, Levinas gives two different readings of these lectures: the first argues that Husserl’s concept of the proto-impression is the receptivity of sensation that provides the basis for intentional constitution. The second reading, by contrast, argues that Husserl’s account is ultimately bound to the category of the Same, as whatever enters consciousness is not put i…Read more
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58Formative encounters with the other: examining the structural differences between Bonhoeffer and LevinasInternational Journal of Philosophy and Theology 84 (1): 35-54. 2023.In this paper, I offer an account of the structural differences, neglected in the literature, between Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Emmanuel Levinas, showing how Bonhoeffer’s account of persons and responsibility is differentiated through creation, fall, and redemption, whereas Levinas’s account of ethical selfhood offers itself as a kind of transcendental account of persons in which the self is structured by its encounter with the other which commands responsibility. This difference (situationally di…Read more
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101From Object to Other: Models of Sociality after Idealism in Gadamer, Levinas, Rosenzweig, and BonhoefferDissertation, University of South Florida. 2017.This dissertation offers an account of the different ways in which putatively idealist and transcendental models of sociality, which grounded the subject’s relation to other human beings in the subject’s own cognition, were rejected and replaced. Scrapping this account led to a variety of models of sociality which departed from the subject as the ground of sociality, positing grounds outside of the subject. Hans-Georg Gadamer, Emmanuel Levinas, Franz Rosenzweig, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer represent…Read more
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