•  1449
    A critical analysis of Alfred Schuetz' conception of rationality based upon Edmund Husserl's phenomenology.
  •  431
    An extended review essay on Andrew Feenberg's Heidegger and Marcuse that argues that the concept of negation in Hegel is distinct from that in Heidegger which makes such an attempted synthesis problematic.
  •  402
    Heideggerian Marxism (review)
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 13 (1): 113-136. 2009.
    An extended review of the English collection of Marcuse's essays and interviews on Heidegger that addresses the philosophical basis of a synthesis of Marx and Heidegger.
  •  318
    Place and Locality in Heidegger’s Late Thought
    Symposium 5 (1): 5-23. 2001.
    Distinguishes the concepts of place and locality in Heidegger's late work and argues that there is an emergent distinction which the essay goes on to clarify further.
  •  230
    The Pathos of a First Meeting: Particularity and Singularity in the Critique of Technological Civilization
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 16 (1): 179-202. 2012.
    A philosophical critique of George Grant's use of Heidegger that refers in detail to Reiner Schurmann to distinguish the terms "particularity" and "singularity."
  •  174
    The Pathos of a First Meeting
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 16 (1): 179-202. 2012.
    In this essay, I will outline the positive content of George Grant's conception of "particularity" and clarify it by comparing it to Reiner Schürmann's similar concept of "singularity" as a starting point for an engagement with the positive good to which it refers. In conclusion, a five-step existential logic will he presented, which, I will suggest, can resolve the important aspects of the difference between them.
  •  84
    A Conversation with Leslie Armour
    Symposium 15 (1): 72-93. 2011.
    Leslie Armour is the author of numerous books and essays on epistemology, metaphysics, logic, Canadian philosophy and Blaise Pascal, as well as on ethics, social and political philosophy, the history of philosophy (especially seventeenth-century philosophy) and social economics. A fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, he has worked as a reporter for The Vancouver Province, briefly as a sub-editor at Reuters News Agency, and for several years as a columnist and feature writer for London Express …Read more
  •  73
    The Idea of a Nation
    with Winthrop Pickard Bell
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 16 (2): 34-46. 2012.
    Winthrop Pickard Bell (1884–1965), a Canadian who studied with Husserl in Göttingen from 1911 to 1914, was arrested after the outbreak of World War I and interred at Ruhleben Prison Camp for the duration of the war. In 1915 or 1916 he presented a lecture titled “Canadian Problems and Possibilities” to other internees at the prison camp. This is the first time Bell’s lecture has appeared in print. Even though the lecture was given to a general audience and thusmakes no explicit reference to Husse…Read more
  •  60
    Socrates and the critique of metaphysics
    The European Legacy 10 (4): 299-314. 2005.
    An extended critique of the applicability of Martin Heidegger and Friedrich Nietzsche's thesis of the end of metaphysics to the philosophical practice of Socrates.
  •  52
    There are three steps in my description of the ground-problem of value: First, Husserl’s analysis of the crisis of reason is based on the systematic loss and phenomenological recovery of the intuitive evidence of the lifeworld. But if letter symbols are essential to formalizing abstraction, as Klein’s de-sedimentation of Vieta’s institution of modern algebra shows, then the ultimate substrates upon which formalization rests cannot be “individuals” in Husserl’s sense. The consequence of the essen…Read more
  •  52
    In Praise of Fire
    New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 4 21-52. 2004.
  •  50
  •  50
    Critical Theory of Digital Media
    Foundations of Science 22 (2): 443-446. 2017.
    Recalling the phenomenological and Hegelian bases of the critique of misplaced concreteness, and supplementing these by the contribution of Gregory Bateson, it is possible to say that a contemporary critique of digital media cannot appeal to an irrevocable concreteness nor finally defeat abstraction. Since the digital media complex is characterized by temporal decay, transversality, and singularity, a new departure for a critical theory of digital media must centre on the cultural unconscious an…Read more
  •  44
    Galilean Science and the Technological Lifeworld
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 21 (2): 133-159. 2017.
    This analysis of Herbert Marcuse’s appropriation of the argument concerning the “mathematization of nature” in Edmund Husserl’s Crisis of the European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology shows that Marcuse and Husserl both assume that the perception of real, concrete individuals in the lifeworld underlies formal scientific abstractions and that the critique of the latter requires a return to such qualitative perception. In contrast, I argue that no such return is possible and that real, co…Read more
  •  36
    This essay seeks to demonstrate that the practice of phenomenological philosophy entails a practice of social and political criticism. The original demand of phenomenology is that theoretical and scientific judgments must be based upon the giving of the ‘things themselves’ in self-evident intuition. The continuous radicalization of this demand is what characterizes phenomenological philosophy and determines a practice of social and political criticism which can be traced through four phases: 1. …Read more
  •  35
    Crisis, Biology, Ecology: A New Starting-Point for Phenomenology?
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 49 (4): 267-279. 2018.
    ABSTRACTThe crisis of European sciences in Husserl’s late work diagnoses Galilean science as specifically and necessarily losing touch with the intuitive evidence that would legitimate it due to its reliance on a formal-mathematical conceptual apparatus. While the vast majority of Husserl’s late work was focussed on a critique of the formal-mathematical paradigm of the physical science of nature, at several points the possibility of biology as the exemplary science is raised to suggest that the …Read more
  •  35
    Limits to Social Representation of Value: Response to Leroy Little Bear
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 39 (4): 537-548. 2012.
    In response to Leroy Little Bear's description of the Blackfoot identity as rooted in place, the article articulates an ecological conception of value based in European thought that can be in close dialogue with the telling aboriginal phrase “I am the environment.” While important similarities are noted, especially the convergence of aboriginal and ecological conceptions of value on a critique of the assessment of value by commodity price, the difficulty of rooting value in Being within the Euro…Read more
  •  32
    Toward a philosophy of technology
    Research in Phenomenology 10 (1): 320-327. 1980.
  •  26
    Jacob Klein's Revisionof Husserl's Crisis
    Philosophy Today 49 (Supplement): 204-211. 2005.
  •  24
    Recent paradigmatic shifts in favor of the 'discourse' approach in social theory are explored and debated.
  •  22
    Through a comparison of the logic of socio-economic and technical development in Marx with the logic of technical invention in Simondon, I argue the thesis that worker’s democracy is the forgotten political form that offers a viable alternative to both capitalism and Soviet-style Communism, the dominant political régimes of the Cold War period that have not yet been surpassed. Marx’s detailed account of the capitalist technical logic from handwork through manufacture to industry is a logic of co…Read more
  •  18
    Susan M. Dodd and Neil G. Robertson . Hegel and Canada (review)
    PhaenEx 13 (1): 131-135. 2019.
  •  15
    Susan M. Dodd and Neil G. Robertson (editors). Hegel and Canada (review)
    Phaenex: Journal of Existential and Phenomenological Theory and Culture 13 (1). 2019.
  •  14
    This paper investigates phenomenological philosophy as the critical consciousness of modernity beginning from that point in the Vienna Lecture where Husserl discounts Papuans and Gypsies, and includes America, in defining Europe as the spiritual home of reason. Its meaning is analyzed through the introduction of the concept of institution in Crisis to argue that the historical fact of encounter with America can be seen as an event for reason insofar as the encounter includes elements previously …Read more