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176Oaths, Promises, and Compulsory Duties: Kant’s Response to Mendelssohn’s JerusalemJournal of the History of Ideas 75 (4): 581-604. 2014.This article argues that Kant's essay on enlightenment responds to Moses Mendelssohn's defense of the freedom of conscience in Jerusalem. While Mendelssohn holds that the freedom of conscience as an inalienable right, Kant argues that the use of one's reason may be constrained by oaths. Kant calls such a constrained use of reason the private use of reason. While he also defends the unconditional freedom of the public use of reason, Kant believes that one makes oneself a part of the machinery of …Read more
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168Transcendental Philosophy and Critical Philosophy in Kant and Foucault: Response to Colin KoopmanFoucault Studies 9 145-155. 2010.
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127The Intelligence of Sense: Rancière’s AestheticsSymposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 15 (2): 11-27. 2011.In this paper, I argue that Jacques Rancière does not propose a purely sensible conception of the aesthetic in his recent writings on art. Unlike many contemporary philosophies of art, Rancière’s aesthetics retains an important cognitive dimension. Here, I bring this aspect of Rancière’s aesthetics into view by comparing the conception of intelligence found in his earlier works with his more recent writings on art, showing that intelligence and sense are distributed in the same ways. The distinc…Read more
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85Kant's Critique of Baumgarten's AestheticsIdealistic Studies 45 (1). 2015.This article considers three objections Immanuel Kant raises against Alexander Baumgarten’s plan for a science of aesthetics at different points in his career. Although Kant’s objections appear to be contradictory, this article argues that the contradiction is the result of an anachronism in the composition of Kant’s Logic. When the contradiction is resolved, it becomes apparent that Kant’s main reason for rejecting Baumgarten’s aesthetics during the pre-critical period—the lack of a priori prin…Read more
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69Kant on Scholarship and the Public Use of ReasonIdealistic Studies 48 (1): 47-68. 2018.In “An Answer to the Question: What is Enlightenment?,” Kant defines the public use of reason as “that use which someone makes of it as a scholar before the entire public of the world of readers.” Commentators rarely note Kant’s reference to “scholarship” in this passage and, when they do, they often disagree about its meaning and significance. This paper addresses those disagreements by exploring discussions of scholarship in Kant’s logic lectures as well as in later works like The Conflict of …Read more
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67Gary Banham, Dennis Schulting And Nigel Helms , The Continuum Companion To Kant London And New York: Continuum International Publishing, 2012 Pp. Xiv+394 Isbn 9781441112576 , Us $190.00 (review)Kantian Review 18 (1): 162-166. 2013.Book Reviews Colin McQuillan, Kantian Review, FirstView Article
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66Kant on the Science of Aesthetics and the Critique of TasteKant Yearbook 9 (1): 113-132. 2017.This article considers the reasons Kant rejects the possibility of a science of aesthetics throughout his career. It begins by surveying the background of Kant’s denial, focusing first on the introduction of aesthetics as a new science in the works of Alexander Baumgarten and Georg Friedrich Meier. After showing that there are numerous ambiguities in the way Baumgarten and Meier present their new science, the article considers Kant’s account of the differences between aesthetics and logic in the…Read more
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66Agamben’s FictionsPhilosophy Compass 7 (6): 376-387. 2012.This article argues that Agamben’s conception of fiction is crucial for understanding his recent works. I suggest that the key to understanding Agamben conception of fiction is to be found in a few curious remarks at the end of Language and Death. These remarks explain why the distinctions between life and death, animal life and human life, bare life and political forms of life, the outlaw and the sovereign, and the norm and the exception that continue to preoccupy Agamben are all fictions. Afte…Read more
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65Beyond the Analytic of Finitude: Kant, Heidegger, FoucaultFoucault Studies 21 184-199. 2016.The editors of the French edition of Michel Foucault's Introduction to Kant's Anthropology claim that Foucault started rereading Kant through Nietzsche in 1952 and then began rereading Kant and Nietzsche through Heidegger in 1953. This claim has not received much attention in the scholarly literature, but its significance should not be underestimated. In this article, I assess the likelihood that the editor’s claim is true and show how Foucault’s introduction to Kant’s Anthropology and his comme…Read more
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61Michel Foucault: Introduction to Kant’s anthropology. Semiotext, translated by Roberto Nigro and Kate Briggs: Los Angeles, 2008, 160 pp, $14.94 , ISBN: 978-1584350545 (review)Continental Philosophy Review 45 (4): 579-585. 2012.
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53Plato in germany: Kant-Natorp-Heidegger (review)Journal of the History of Philosophy 49 (3): 382-383. 2011.
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47Critique in German Philosophy: From Kant to Critical Theory (edited book)SUNY Press. 2020.Critique has been a central theme in the German philosophical tradition since the eighteenth century. The main goal of this book is to provide a history of this concept from its Kantian inception to contemporary critical theory. Focusing on both canonical and previously overlooked texts and thinkers, the contributors bring to light alternative conceptions of critique within nineteenth- and twentieth-century German philosophy, which have profound implications for contemporary philosophy. By offer…Read more
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45Review of Alix Cohen, Kant and the Human Sciences: Biology, Anthropology, and History (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2010 (8). 2010.
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44Philosophical Archaeology and the Historical A PrioriSymposium 20 (2): 142-159. 2016.Most accounts of the historical a priori can be traced back to Husserlian phenomenology. Foucault’s appeals to the historical a priori are more problematic because of his hostility to this tradition. In this paper, I argue that Foucault’s diplôme thesis on Hegel, his studies of Kant’s Anthropology, his response to critics of The Order of Things, and his later work on Kant’s essay “An Answer to the Question: What is Enlightenment?” all suggest that eighteenth- and nineteenth-century German philos…Read more
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42Recent Contributions to Dilthey’s Philosophy of the Human SciencesJournal of the History of Philosophy 50 (4): 622-624. 2011.
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41Review of Kristi Sweet, Kant on Freedom, Nature, and Judgment: The Territory of the Third Critique (review)Kantian Review 1-4. 2024.
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34The Science of Aesthetics, the Critique of Taste, and the Philosophy of Art: Ambiguities and ContradictionsAesthetic Investigations 4 (2): 144-162. 2021.Aesthetics is the part of contemporary academic philosophy that is concerned with art, beauty, criticism, and taste. As such, it must address metaphysical issues, epistemic problems, and questions of value. This makes it difficult to present a coherent account of the subject matter of aesthetics. In this article, I argue that this difficulty is the result of ambiguities and contradictions that arose in disputes about the relationship between the science of aesthetics, the critique of taste, and …Read more
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32Response to Jose Luis Fernandez, “Bridging the Gap of Kant’s Historical Antinomy”Southwest Philosophy Review 33 (2): 103-106. 2017.
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31A Merely Logical DistinctionEpoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 20 (2): 387-405. 2016.Throughout his career, Immanuel Kant objects that Leibniz and Wolff make the distinction between sensible and intellectual cognition into a “merely logical” distinction. Although it is not clear that anyone in the Leibnizian-Wolffian tradition actually holds this view, Kant’s objection helps to define the “real” distinction between sensible and intellectual cognition that he defends in his inaugural dissertation in 1770. Kant raises the same objection against Leibniz and Wolff in the Critique of…Read more
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31The Remarriage of Reason and Experience in Kant’s Critique of Pure ReasonEpoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 24 (1): 53-69. 2019.This article argues that Immanuel Kant recreates in his critical philosophy one of the most distinctive features of Christian Wolff’s rationalism—the marriage of reason and experience. The article begins with an overview of Wolff’s connubium and then surveys the reasons some of his contemporaries opposed the marriage of reason and experience, paying special attention to the distinctions between phenomena and noumena, sensible and intellectual cognition, and empirical and pure cognition that Kant…Read more
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30Dreams of a Spirit-Seer and Kant’s Critical Method: Comments on Stephen R. Palmquist’s Kant and MysticismKantian Review 26 (1): 113-117. 2021.In his new book, Kant and Mysticism, Stephen Palmquist argues that Kant had already formulated his critical method by the mid-1760s and that it emerged from his reflections on Swedenborg’s mystical visions. In order to evaluate these claims, I consider Kant’s correspondence with Charlotte von Knobloch and Moses Mendelssohn before and after the publication of Dreams of a Spirit-Seer; the context in which Kant published Dreams; and the method he employs when he discusses Swedenborg’s visions in th…Read more
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29The Kantian Aesthetic: From Knowledge to the Avant-Garde, by Paul Crowther.: Book Reviews (review)Mind 122 (488): 1075-1078. 2013.
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26Moses Mendelssohn , Morning Hours: Lectures on God’s Existence , Ed. And Trans. by Daniel O. Dahlstrom and Corey Dyck. Reviewed by (review)Philosophy in Review 34 (5): 257-261. 2014.
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25GUYER, PAUL. A History of Modern Aesthetics, Volume 2: The Nineteenth Century. Cambridge University Press, 2014, vii +478, $355.00 cloth [for 3-volume set] (review)Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 75 (2): 199-201. 2017.
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24Extensive Clarity in Baumgarten’s Poetics and AestheticsIdealistic Studies 54 (1): 71-93. 2024.Anglophone philosophers have shown a surprising interest in Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten’s aesthetics in recent years. At the same time, new approaches to aesthetics have been proposed that come very close to the original conception of aesthetics that Baumgarten introduced in the middle of the eighteenth century. In light of these developments, this article undertakes a critical examination of a central concept in Baumgarten’s poetics and aesthetics—extensive clarity. It argues that historians …Read more
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23Review of Alison Stone, The Edinburgh Critical History of Nineteenth-Century Philosophy (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. 2011.
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23Early Modern AestheticsRowman & Littlefield International. 2015.A clear and concise account of the relationship between aesthetics and philosophy in Europe during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and the development of aesthetics as a discipline in its own right.
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23Patrick R. Frierson, Kant's Empirical Psychology. Reviewed by (review)Philosophy in Review 35 (6): 299-301. 2015.
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Areas of Specialization
Immanuel Kant |
17th/18th Century German Philosophy |
17th/18th Century Philosophy |
Aesthetics |