• Lagerkoller. Giorgio Agamben und seine Texte zur Pandemie
    Zibaldone. Zeitschrift Für Italienische Kultur der Gegenwart 71 63-72. 2021.
    In his collection of articles, "Where Are We Now - The Epidemic as Politics", Giorgio Agamben appears to make some very startling (if not downright outrageous) claims concerning the political situation in Italy and elsewhere in Europe during the Covid-19 pandemic. In this piece [in German] I analyse how these claims are rooted in the philosophy of Agamben's "Homo sacer" project. Focussing on three central notions (Schmitt's "state of exception", Foucault's "biopolitics", and Agamben's very own "…Read more
  • Coming Full Circle. Experience, Tradition, and Critique in Gadamer and McDowell
    In Daniel Martin Feige & Thomas J. Spiegel (eds.), McDowell and the hermeneutic tradition, Routledge. pp. 166-191. 2023.
    John McDowell’s Mind and World takes us on a philosophical journey leading from the concept of experience to the concept of tradition. It also traces a conceptual path from a Kantian to a Gadamerian problematic. In this paper, it is argued that a final step is missing in order to complete the conceptual arc of Mind and World and make the book come full circle: The Kantian conception of experience articulated on the first pages of of the book needs to be integrated into the hermeneutic framework …Read more
  • In a series of intriguing and far-reaching papers, Hannah Ginsborg introduced the notion of “primitive normativity” as the cornerstone of a novel account of the normativity of concepts, thought, and meaning. Her account is supposed to steer a middle course between what she regards as the two horns of a dilemma first laid out by Saul Kripke in his seminal reading of Wittgenstein’s discussion of rule-following. I propose to investigate Ginsborg’s conception. I begin by establishing the conceptual …Read more
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    This book attempts to give a systematic account of the development of semantic holism within the philosophy of language in the 20th century. One of the things that might make it interesting is that it covers philosophers from the analytic tradition (Hilbert, Schlick, Sellars, Davidson, McDowell) as well as structuralist and post-structuralist philosophers (Saussure, Jakobson, Hjelmslev, Merleau-Ponty, Derrida). It is not only claimed that these philosophers address what can intelligibly be recog…Read more
  • Die Philosophie John McDowells (edited book)
    with Barth Christian
    Mentis. 2014.
    This companion to the philosophy of John McDowell is the first comprehensive critical introduction to his work in German. It presents the central topics of his thought from the 1970s to the present day, explores McDowell's original interpretations and appropriations of the thought of philosophers from Aristotle to Sellars, and discusses his work from the perspectives of other philosophical schools and traditions. The book contains articles by Christian Barth, Georg Bertram, Christoph Demmerling,…Read more
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    Sinnbildung als Weltbildung
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 67 (2): 307-312. 2019.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie Jahrgang: 67 Heft: 2 Seiten: 307-312.
  • Die Artikulation der Welt (edited book)
    with Bertram Georg, Jasper Liptow, and Martin Seel
    Humanities Online. 2006.
    A collection of essays by German philosophers on the question of the dispensability or indispensability of language for human capacities of thought, perception, and agency.
  •  99
    Robert Brandom defends the intelligibility of the notion of a fully discursive practice that does not include any kind of logical vocabulary. Logical vocabulary, according to his account, should be understood as an optional extra to discursive practice, not as a necessary ingredient. Call this the Layer Cake Picture of the relation of logical to non-logical discursive practices. The aim pursued in this paper is to show, by way of an internal critique, that the Layer Cake Picture is in fact incom…Read more
  • Die Welt im Blick haben. John McDowell über das Sehen von etwas als etwas
    In Bertram Georg, Jasper Liptow, David Lauer & Martin Seel (eds.), Die Artikulation der Welt, Humanities Online. pp. 65-88. 2006.
    According to Donald Davidson and other philosophers who wish to avoid what Sellars called the Myth of the Given (like Brandom and Rorty), the relation between the deliverances of our senses and our conceptual capacities is not foundational (justificatory), but merely causal. In Mind and World, John McDowell criticizes Davidson for this view and maintains that this kind of coherentism makes it impossible to understand the intentionality of thought and language. However, many critics have complain…Read more
  • Wittgenstein und die Gewalt des Namens
    In Steffen K. Herrmann & Hannes Kuch (eds.), Philosophien sprachlicher Gewalt, Velbrück. pp. 134-153. 2010.
    This article (in German) develops the outlines of a Wittgensteinian philosophy of the proper name. It goes beyond standard analytical treatments of proper names as referential devices in asking what kind of role the proper name of a person has for that person's identity. Hence, proper names are discussed in their relations with the capacity of saying "I", with the capacity of addressing persons as persons (or saying "you"), and with the general role words play for a person's symbolic identity. I…Read more
  •  104
    Genuine Normativity, Expressive Bootstrapping, and Normative Phenomenalism
    Etica and Politica / Ethics & Politics 11 (1): 321-350. 2009.
    In this paper, I offer a detailed critical reading of Robert Brandom’s project to give an expressive bootstrapping account of intentionality, cashed out as a normative-phenomenalist account of what I will call genuine normativity. I claim that there is a reading of Making It Explicit that evades the predominant charges of either reductionism or circularity. However, making sense of Brandom’s book in the way proposed here involves correcting Brandom’s own general account of what he is doing in it…Read more
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    This paper (in German) is a contribution to the ongoing engagement of phenomenological authors with John McDowell's philosophy of perception (most prominent in the so-called Dreyfus-McDowell-Debate). First, I argue that McDowell and Merleau-Ponty share a common topic (the intentionality of perception), a common question (how is it possible?), a common position in the debate (neither empiricism nor intellectualism provide satisfactory answers to the question), and a common conviction (no epistemi…Read more
  •  17
    Anschauung und kritische Subjektivität
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 58 (3): 492-498. 2010.
    This is a review article on John McDowell's philosophical papers collected in "Having the World in View" and "The Engaged Intellect", both from Harvard UP, 2008.
  • Offenheit zur Welt. Die Auflösung des Dualismus von Begriff und Anschauung
    In Barth Christian & Lauer David (eds.), Die Philosophie John McDowells, Mentis. pp. 37-62. 2014.
    This article (in German) discusses the scope and content of John McDowell's famous claim that human perception is "conceptual all the way out". I motivate the claim by explaining its role within McDowell's transcendental concern to account for the mind's "openness to the world", i. e. the immediate presence or givenness (no capital "G") of objective reality in human perception. I argue that (a) dissolving this problem requires us to understand human perception as a rational power, that (b) a rat…Read more
  •  55
    What Is It to Know Someone?
    Philosophical Topics 42 (1): 321-344. 2014.
    Ordinary language makes a distinction between knowing a person by having seen her before and knowing her “personally,” that is, by having interacted with her. The aim of my paper is to substantiate this distinction between knowledge by interaction and knowledge by acquaintance, that is, knowledge acquired by way of the senses. According to my view, knowledge of a person by interaction is the kind of knowledge sustained by addressing her as “you.” I claim that this second-person knowledge is esse…Read more
  • This paper (in German) lays out two different conceptions of language as 'Spiel', which I call - appropriating a pair of expressions used by Wilhelm von Humboldt - 'Spiel' as 'ergon' and 'Spiel' as 'energeia'. The first one conceives of 'Spiel' as 'game', an abstract entity constituted by a set of rules; the second one conceives of 'Spiel' as 'play', a mode of being that is constituted by a certain kind of movement. I show how the metaphor of language as 'Spiel' has been interpreted in both of t…Read more
  •  14
    Die Feinkörnigkeit des Begrifflichen
    Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 61 (5-6): 769-786. 2013.
    This paper examines a deeply engrained intuition according to which the relation between concepts and perception is deeply problematic, because - so the intuition goes - our conceptual capacities are constitutively unable to match our perceptual capacities in fineness of grain. After some introductory remarks concerning the concept of a concept , I present the intuition and articulate the argument from fineness of grain that the intuition embodies . I go on to sketch the conception of a specific…Read more
  • Anamorphotische Aspekte. Wittgenstein über Techniken des Sehens
    In Kyung-Ho Cha & Markus Rautzenberg (eds.), Der entstellte Blick, Fink. pp. 230-244. 2008.
    This paper (in German) uses Wittgenstein's concept of seeing aspects to understand the peculiarities of anamorphotic art. I aim to show that Wittgenstein's conception of aspect perception includes the idea of conceptual capacities as well as of bodily techniques and hence bridges the supposed divide between receptivity and spontaneity. A comparison is suggested with some aspects of Merleau-Ponty's philosophy of perception.
  • This article (in German) presents a sustained critique of Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht's conceptual dichotomy of linguistic meaning and bodily or perceptual presence (as developed in his "Production of Presence: What Meaning Cannot Convey" and other writings). It is argued that Gumbrecht's fear of a "loss of presence" in contemporary philosophical reflection is based on a certain formalist-structuralist view of language that is, although predominant in some quarters during the 20th century, ultimately …Read more