Imogen Sullivan

Arcadia University
  •  26
    Accidentality? Thinking Alongside Mexican Existentialists
    with Carlos Alberto Sánchez, III Roberto A. Carleo, and Gregory E. Doukas
    Journal of World Philosophies 9 (2). 2025.
    _In this symposium, Roberto A. Carleo III, Gregory Doukas and Imogen M. Sullivan think alongside Carlos Alberto Sánchez about the contingency of human existence as it is understood in Mexican existentialism. They ask: Should the notion of a metaphysical substance be discarded altogether due to its misuse in the history of European philosophy? Or are there philosophical reasons to avoid ontological uncertainty by, for example, postulating the notion of a non-discrete substance? And if attempts to…Read more
  •  151
    Review of John Dewey, Confucius, and Global Philosophy, by Joseph Grange (review)
    Philosophy East and West 60 (3): 427-430. 2010.
    The last decade has seen the rapid rise of China as a global power, and the stability of China-U.S. relations has taken on global significance. The two political giants are meeting in the Middle East, Africa, and even Latin America. As Joseph Grange aptly points out, rising tensions over such issues as human rights and national sovereignty are not simply the result of differing political agendas. Underlying cultural assumptions and historical meanings are at the root of these differences, and op…Read more
  •  48
    One corner of the square: essays on the philosophy of Roger T. Ames (edited book)
    University of Hawaiʻi Press. 2021.
    In a historical moment when cross-cultural communication proves both necessary and difficult, the work of comparative philosophy is timely. Philosophical resources for building a shared future marked by vitality and collaborative meaning-making are in high demand. Taking note of the present global philosophical situation, this collection of essays critically engages the scholarship of Roger T. Ames, who for decades has had a central role in the evolution of comparative and nonwestern philosophy.…Read more
  •  72
    The Need for More than Role Relations
    Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 20 (2): 269-287. 2021.
    This article argues for the necessity of a social group ontology in Confucian ethics. The heart of Confucian ethics is self-cultivation begun in familial relations. Social group categories can disrupt family structures in ways that can only be ignored at a high cost to the well-being of biological family members who do not share the dominant group identities. To make this disruption clear, I will articulate the challenge queer lives pose for classical Confucian self-cultivation. This discussion …Read more
  •  72
    Review of The bloomsbury research handbook of Chinese philosophy methodologies (review)
    Comparative and Continental Philosophy 10 (3): 290-294. 2018.
    Philosophy has long been concerned with its own methodologies, but methodology has become particularly important in recent decades as the discipline has faced, first, “the encroachment” of science...
  •  51
    Review of Confucian propriety and ritual learning: a philosophical interpretation (review)
    Comparative and Continental Philosophy 9 (1). 2017.
  •  96
    This article argues that there has been a general misunderstanding of the nature of role relations in Confucian role ethics. Recasting constitutive role relations in light of Beauvoir's ethics of ambiguity will aid in developing Confucian role ethics as a contemporary vision of human flourishing that can internally accommodate the need for a feminist transformation.
  •  209
    Expanding Process, Exploring Philosophical and Theological Transformations in China and the West, by John Berthrong, is a model study of processive motifs in Chinese traditions and their contributions to global process-relational philosophy. Process-relational philosophy, which became a full-fledged school of thought in the twentieth century with the works of Alfred North Whitehead and the American Pragmatists, conceives of reality as constant flux. This metaphysical view is opposed to the subst…Read more