University of Toronto, St. George Campus
Graduate Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2006
Peterborough, Ontario, Canada
  •  56
    Quasi-Cause in Deleuze
    Symposium 10 (1): 117-133. 2006.
  •  53
    Rethinking Facticity
    Symposium 13 (1): 137-140. 2009.
  •  42
    A Continuity Between the A and B Deductions of the Critique
    Idealistic Studies 39 (1-3): 53-69. 2009.
    Heidegger’s Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics controversially claims that the A deduction is superior to the B deduction because the imagination, as the“common root” of understanding and sensibility, opens the first Critique to metaphysical ground. Drawing on Dieter Henrich, this paper reinterprets Heidegger’sreading by moving beyond the Analytic and taking the Dialectic into account. This suggests a continuity between the A and B deductions, namely that the imagination, as more than an ontic …Read more
  •  36
    Kant's Physical Geography
    Comparative and Continental Philosophy 4 (1). 2012.
    Reading Kant’s Geography, edited by Stuart Elden and Eduardo Mendieta, State University of New York Press, 2011, 382 pp., pb. $34.95, hb. $90.00, ISBN-13: 9781438436050. This review of an edited collection, Reading Kant’s Geography, discusses a series of critical essays on Kant’s physical geography, a topic to which he devoted many years of intellectual energy. The volume is the first of its kind for it appears in anticipation of the first ever publication into English of Kant’s own lectures on …Read more
  •  16
    New Forms of Revolt: Essays on Kristeva's Intimate Politics ed. by Sarah K. Hansen and Rebecca Tuvel
    philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 9 (1): 159-165. 2019.
  •  14
    Violence and “Hyperbologic”: Lawlor on Time’s Relation to Metaphysics
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 56 (3): 365-378. 2018.
    In his recent work, Leonard Lawlor draws attention to the problem of “violence,” which is the “problem that provides the most food for thought.” This emphasis on the problem of violence and its connections to metaphysics understood as philosophy has been remarkably consistent over his career, and thinking through responses to “violence” has sustained Lawlor’s continued effort to think about what he calls “violent” relations between event and repeatability and ground these upon a critical phenome…Read more
  •  10
    Quasi-Cause in Deleuze: Inverting the Body Without Organs
    Symposium 10 (1): 117-133. 2006.
  •  9
    On Hegel and Nancy’s Relation-World
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 45 (1-2): 91-110. 2018.
    To-be being-with, that is, to be co-constitutive of the world of spirit and as well of the world of the social: this is how Jean-Luc Nancy reformulates Hegel’s question of Being’s identity with thought. Nancy’s preoccupation with the Thought-event of being offers a transformative reading of Hegel, one which calls for a move beyond the political tradition of Being’s identity with representational thought. Hegel contributes to a renewal of the idea of thinking that moves beyond representation by i…Read more
  •  5
    L'héritage de Hegel = (edited book)
    Presses de l'Université Laval. 2022.
  •  5
    New Forms of Revolt: Essays on Kristeva’s Intimate Politics, eds. Sarah K. Hansen and Rebecca Tuvel (review)
    philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 9 (1): 159-165. 2019.
  • Feminist Philosophy
    In Constantin V. Boundas (ed.), The Edinburgh Companion to Twentieth-Century Philosophies, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 590-602. 2007.
  • Heidegger and Gadamer
    In Francois Raffoul & Eric S. Nelson (eds.), The Bloomsbury Companion to Heidegger, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 165. 2013.
  • Time’S Disquiet and Unrest
    In John E. Drabinski & Eric Sean Nelson (eds.), Between Levinas and Heidegger, State University of New York Press. pp. 85-107. 2014.
  • Heidegger and Descartes
    In Francois Raffoul & Eric S. Nelson (eds.), The Bloomsbury Companion to Heidegger, Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 13--97. 2013.