Columbus, Ohio, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Epistemology
Philosophy of Mind
Areas of Interest
Epistemology
Philosophy of Mind
  •  77
    Princess Diana’s death was a tragedy that provoked mourning across the globe; the death of a homeless person, more often than not, is met with apathy. How can we account for this uneven distribution of emotion? Can it simply be explained by the prevailing scientific understanding? Uncovering a rich tradition beginning with Aristotle, _The Secret History of Emotion_ offers a counterpoint to the way we generally understand emotions today. Through a radical rereading of Aristotle, Seneca, Thomas Ho…Read more
  •  13
    Inhalt
    with Sonja Koroliov, Thomas Martinec, Ulrike Jekutsch, Leonhard Herrmann, Elisabeth von Erdmann, Natalija D. Kochetkova, Natalie Schneider, Andrey Kostin, Caroline Torra-Mattenklott, Sara Dickinson, Rüdiger Zill, Markus Reitzenstein, and Peter Goldie
  •  16
    Being-moved: rhetoric as the art of listening
    University of California Press. 2020.
    If rhetoric is the art of speaking, who is listening? In Being-Moved, Daniel M. Gross provides an answer, showing when and where the art of speaking parted ways with the art of listening-and what happens when they intersect once again. Much in the history of rhetoric must be rethought along the way. And much of this rethinking pivots around Martin Heidegger's early lectures on Aristotle's Rhetoric, where his famous topic, Being, gives way to being-moved. The results, Gross goes on to show, are p…Read more
  • Historiography and the limits of (sacred) rhetoric
    In Michael F. Bernard-Donals & Kyle Jensen (eds.), Responding to the sacred: an inquiry into the limits of rhetoric, The Pennsylvania State University Press. 2021.
  •  47
    The Weimar Origins of Rhetorical Inquiry (review)
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 54 (4): 421-426. 2021.
    When we pick up a big book like this with big names including Heidegger, Arendt, Benjamin, and Warburg, we want to learn something significant we don't already know by way of reading and reputation. And if we are in rhetoric per se, we are especially eager to see how these people are attached substantially to a field that none of them claimed. Following from these initial expectations, we are then owed a plausible methodology that tends neither toward the wish fulfillment of big rhetoric, nor to…Read more
  •  115
    Beginnings and Ends of Rhetorical Theory: Ann Arbor 1900
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 53 (1): 34-50. 2020.
    Google Ngram metadata reveal that the English phrase “rhetorical theory” is not that old, appearing on the scene in the latter half of the nineteenth century, and then picking up dramatically with critical and literary theory in the 1960s. How do we square this with familiar arguments that rhetorical theory is much, much older? In this forum contribution I argue that the long view applies to our contemporary rhetorical theory only if we equivocate. Much of what currently falls under the heading …Read more
  •  107
    At the outset it is worth remembering how Heidegger in the 1970s first appeared prominently, though very differently, at the intersection of rhetoric and philosophy. The "rhetoric of figures and tropes" then seemed compelling due in part to Derrida's Heidegger, who played a key role in the famous Derrida essay translated into English with the added subtitle "White Mythology: Metaphor in the Text of Philosophy." Compelling for many was the history there referenced from Cicero, book 3 of Aristotle…Read more
  •  53
    Listening, Thinking, Being: Toward an Ethics of Attunement (review)
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 49 (1): 117-119. 2016.
  •  68
    Introduction: Alva Noë, "In Focus"
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 54 (1): 25-27. 2021.
    Alva Noë, who is a major figure in establishment philosophy, has been producing work that speaks directly to rhetoric in new ways that are important. This "In Focus" project explores how so, with the help of Carrie Noland on dance, Thomas Rickert on music, and, in a previous issue of Philosophy & Rhetoric 53.1, Nancy Struever on the basics of human inquiry including pictorial, which she thinks almost nobody gets right except for R. G. Collingwood, and perhaps now Noë. In each case you will see h…Read more
  •  289
    Darwin and the Situation of Emotion Research
    with Stephanie D. Preston
    Emotion Review 12 (3): 179-190. 2020.
    This article demonstrates how researchers from both the sciences and the humanities can learn from Charles Darwin’s mixed methodology. We identify two basic challenges that face emotion research in the sciences, namely a mismatch between experiment design and the complexity of life that we aim to explain, and problematic efforts to bridge the gap, including invalid inferences from constrained study designs, and equivocal use of terms like “sympathy” and “empathy” that poorly reflect such methodo…Read more
  •  105
    Why Theory Now? An Introduction
    Philosophy and Rhetoric 53 (1): 1-5. 2020.
    “rhetorical theory” since 1800. Data source: Google Trends “rhetorical theory”, “literary theory”, and “critical theory”, since 1800. Data source: Google Trends The old news is that Theory with a capital “T” happened from approximately 1965–85 and then dissipated in scandal. Or to the contrary, Theory is an ancient and global activity we find wherever we have evidence of systematic reflection, upon language especially. Alive and well. But neither of these stories can be adequate given a graph li…Read more