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In the Realm of ShadesHistory of Philosophy Quarterly 42 (4): 329-344. 2025.This paper highlights the ways in which Kant engages with obscure representations (dunkle Vorstellungen) throughout his 1766 essay Dreams of a Spirit Seer Elucidated by Dreams of Metaphysics. Kant works with obscure representations at the levels of philosophical method, form, and content. First, obscure representations are implicated at the level of philosophical method, since for Kant philosophy itself involves pulling obscure representations out of darkness and into the light; second, the text…Read more
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Authority and Ambivalence: On Kant, Freud, and Moral PsychologyMind. forthcoming.In recent decades, philosophers have turned to Freud’s last metapsychology of id, ego, and super-ego in order to reconstruct a naturalistic, developmental account of a Kantian moral psychology. In this paper I try to show that Freud’s conception of the super-ego as the intra-psychic source of authority presents a challenge to Kantian conceptions of conscience. I argue that the recent philosophical reconstruction of Freud omits a crucial and unusual detail: according to Freud, the super-ego has a…Read more
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On Annie Ernaux and Simone de Beauvoir, writing, philosophy, and shameShame and PhilosophyRaritan Quarterly 44 (3): 49-70. 2025. -
Obscure representations from a pragmatic point of viewEuropean Journal of Philosophy 32 (4): 1068-1085. 2024.Kant's most sustained discussion of obscure representations can be found in the first book of his Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View. What is puzzling is that in the middle of the section devoted to the topic, Kant asserts that “because this field can only be perceived in his passive side as a play of sensations, the theory of obscure representations belongs only to physiological anthropology, and so it is properly disregarded here.” So, do obscure representations belong to pragmatic an…Read more
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Moral Psychology as Soul PictureThe Philosophical Quarterly. forthcoming.Iris Murdoch offers a distinctive conception of moral psychology. She suggests that to develop a moral psychology is to develop what she calls a soul-picture; different philosophical moral psychologies are, as she puts it, “rival soul-pictures.” In this paper I clarify Murdoch’s generic notion of “soul-picture,” the genus of which, for example, Aristotle’s, Kant’s, Nietzsche’s, and Murdoch’s constitute rival species. Are all philosophical moral psychologies soul-pictures? If not, what are th…Read more
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Kant's FantasyMind 133 (531): 714-741. 2024.Throughout his lectures and published writings on anthropology, Kant describes a form of unintentional, unstructured, obscure, and pleasurable imaginative mental activity, which he calls fantasy (Phantasie), where we ‘take pleasure in letting our mind wander about in obscurity.’ In the context of his pragmatic anthropology, Kant was concerned not only to describe this form of mental activity as a fact of human psychology, but more importantly, to criticize and discourage it. But must we share Ka…Read more
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OpacityThe Philosopher 110 (3): 37-41. 2022.
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Kant on Reflection and Virtue (by Melissa Merritt) (review)Society for German Idealism and Romanticism 2 60-72. 2019.
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Kant on Evil, Self-Deception, and Moral Reform (by Laura Papish) (review)Journal of the History of Philosophy 58 (2): 410-411. 2020.
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Unity and Synthesis in the Ego Ideal: Reading Freud’s Concept through Kant’s PhilosophyAmerican Imago 3 (69): 353-383. 2012.
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I Want to Know More About You: On Knowing and Acknowledging in ChinatownIn Garry L. Hagberg (ed.), Stanley Cavell on Aesthetic Understanding, Springer Verlag. pp. 3-35. 2018.What is the difference between knowing someone and acknowledging them? Is it possible to want to be acknowledged while remaining unknown? And if one’s desire to know another person is too consuming, can this foreclose the possibility of acknowledgment? Cavell argues that we sometimes avoid the ethical problem of acknowledgment by (mis)conceiving our relations with others in terms of knowledge and that this epistemic misconception can actually amount to a form of ethical harm. I show that Polansk…Read more
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Kantian Self-Conceit and the Two Guises of AuthorityCanadian Journal of Philosophy 50 (2): 268-283. 2020.There is a debate in the literature as to whether Kantian self-conceit is intrapsychic or interpersonal. I argue that self-conceit is both. I argue that, for Kant, self-conceit is fundamentally an illusion about authority, one’s own and any authority one stands in relation to. Self-conceit refuses to recognize the authority of the law. But the law “shows up” for us in two guises: one’s own reason and other persons. Thus, self-conceit refuses to recognize both guises of the law. Hence self-concei…Read more
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"How Shall We Put Ourselves in Touch with Reality?" On Baldwin, Film, and AcknowledgmentSocial Research: An International Quarterly 87 (4): 991-1021. 2020.What might film’s contribution be to the work of acknowledgment, apology, and moral repair? James Baldwin's 1976 book on film, The Devil Finds Work, can be read as a reflection on the role that film might play in the extensive, multi-dimensional, public task of, as he puts it, putting ourselves in touch with reality, specifically the reality of American racism as an integral to American reality, its past and present. Developing Baldwin's thought, this paper outlines two broad types of cinematic …Read more
Areas of Specialization
1 more
| Moral Psychology |
| Immanuel Kant |
| Sigmund Freud |
| Aesthetics |
| History of Ethics |
| Philosophy of Film |