-
108Review of William S. Allen, Ellipsis: Of Poetry and the Experience of Language after Heidegger, Hoelderlin, and Blanchot (review)Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 28 (2): 194-200. 2007.This is a review of a book by William S. Allen.
-
741The Anarchy of Justice: Hesiod’s Chaos, Anaximander’s Apeiron, and Geometric ThoughtKilikya Felsefe Dergisi / Cilicia Journal of Philosophy 9 (1): 1-16. 2022.This article examines Hesiod’s Chaos and Anaximander’s apeiron individually and in relation to each other through the frame of René Descartes’ notion of natural geometry and through bounds and limits in Euclid and Immanuel Kant. Thanks to this frame, it shows that, in his poetic vision, Hesiod saw in Chaos the act of bounding such that different things can appear while, in his speculative vision, Anaximander saw in the apeiron the self-limiting limit of bounded things, which is to say, time as d…Read more
-
503Review of Andrew J. Martin, The Covenant with Moses and the Kingdom of God: Thomas Hobbes and the Theology of the Old Covenant in Early Modern England (review)Convivium 37 (1): 163-171. 2024.The is a review of Andrew J. Martin's book, _The Covenant with Moses and the Kingdom of God: Thomas Hobbes and the Theology of the Old Covenant in Early Modern England_
-
599This chapter first gives a rough outline of the reasoning behind the division of this collection of essays, one part focused on particular issues and the second on more universal ones. It then works out that reasoning in more detail through an examination of the historical development of the relationship between storytelling, as represented by myth and poetry, and history in the Western tradition from Hesiod through Hegel. The thesis is that Aristotle’s philosophical preference for poetry over h…Read more
-
1928Stories and Memories, Memories and Histories: A Cross-disciplinary Volume on Time, Narrativity, and Identity (edited book)Brill. 2025.This edited volume brings together authors from a wide variety of disciplines in the social sciences and humanities. A historian first investigates understudied samizdat literature, a film critic then analyzes Balkan cinema via psychoanalysis, a psychologist examines contemporary European border policies, and a political scientist analyzes the Confederate-memorial debate. Philosophers consider the space of those memorials, ethno-national narratives in India, the Anthropocene and the mind’s histo…Read more
-
281Czechoslovakia after 1989 through Arendt's eyes : from pariahs to strong menIn Peter Šajda (ed.), Modern and Postmodern Crises of Symbolic Structures: Essays in Philosophical Anthropology, Brill | Rodopi. pp. 125-157. 2020.Dissident circles during the Czechoslovak communist regime were organized in semi-private islands of resistance. They saw themselves as a parallel polis in line with Arendt’s notion of political action by pursuing “life in truth,” authentic experience, and ultimately freedom. The heroes of these circles were that society’s pariahs. In their quest for authenticity, they turned to the past to find meaning, to understand the nature of their communities and the needs for political action towards the…Read more
-
716Increasing the Probability of Good Art: Descartes, Aesthetic Judgment, and GenerosityFlsf: Felsefe Ve Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi 37 259-282. 2024.Descartes’ first book, 1618’s Compendium of Music, focuses on biomechanical reactions in the human body but also claims that the purpose of art is to arouse emotions. By the end of the 1630s, however, he had given up on precisely predicting how that arousal may occur. This article contends, though, that Descartes’ abandonment of that project is a result of using an inappropriate psychological model for such predictions. An appropriate model is developed in his last book, 1649’s The Passions of t…Read more
-
626Power, Energy, and the Society of Individuality in J. S. Mill’s On LibertyCadernos Miroslav Milovic 1 (1): 5-15. 2023.I begin, haltingly, and the individual begins, for John Stuart Mill, with an impulse. My impulse, in terms of Mill, is to ask after power and energy in his On Liberty. There, impulses are desires and those of the “Strong” variety are synonymous with energy (Mill 2002, p. 62). An individual with their own impulses has character and one with strong impulses governed by a strong will has energetic character. One without them has no character. I begin haltingly, in part, because, insofar as my impul…Read more
-
942Le Trois Modes de Domination et la Mere dans De Cive et Leviathan de HobbesIn Yves Charles Zarka & Liang Pang (eds.), Hobbes : Le pouvoir entre domination et resistance, Vrin. pp. 39-57. 2022.While not ignored, the question of the role of mothers in the schema of political rule in Hobbes is not often taken up. Distinct from his contemporaries, Hobbes acknowledges only minimal differences between men and women, and argues that, because maternal protection and nourishment are necessary for its survival, the mother dominates the infant in the state of nature. How to explain that the mother loses this power of domination in the social or political order? Hobbes does not explicitly say. H…Read more
-
148Victimhood in Bataille‘s Reading of Sade and in Popular SovereigntyPhilosophy Today 65 (4): 789-805. 2021.This article reveals three aspects of victimhood in Bataille’s reading of Sade (of the other, of the self, and Sade’s language) and relates them to some of Bataille’s metaphysical and political notions: the impossible, the general and the restricted economy, sovereignty, and transgression. Doing so shows a progressive simplification of possibilities for transgression from the pre-Christian world to that of popular sovereignty, i.e., the sovereignty of the crowd, the latter leaving open one avenu…Read more
-
1057Czechoslovakia after 1989 through Arendt's Eyes: From Pariahs to Strong MenIn Peter Šajda (ed.), Modern and Postmodern Crises of Symbolic Structures: Essays in Philosophical Anthropology, Brill | Rodopi. pp. 125-157. 2020.Dissident circles during the Czechoslovak communist regime were organized in semi-private islands of resistance. They saw themselves as a parallel polis in line with Arendt’s notion of political action by pursuing “life in truth,” authentic experience, and ultimately freedom. The heroes of these circles were that society’s pariahs. In their quest for authenticity, they turned to the past to find meaning, to understand the nature of their communities and the needs for political action towards the…Read more
-
909The Leviathan Becoming a Cephalophore: Primogeniture and the Transition from Sovereignty to GovernmentalityKaygi 19 (2): 464-484. 2020.For Foucault, Hobbes is important for the transition from sovereignty to governmentality, but he does not always go into great detail how. In “Society Must Be Defended”, Hobbes’s reactions against the political historicism of his time lead him to an ahistorical foundation to the state. In Security, Territory, Population, his contract is emblematic of the art of government still caught in the logic of sovereignty. Management techniques, one of which being inheritance laws like primogeniture, indu…Read more
-
127Fantasy, Counter-fantasy, and Meta-fantasy in Hobbes’s and Butler’s Accounts of VulnerabilityPhilosophy Today 64 (3): 617-636. 2020.Hobbes and Butler both conjure images of an abandoned infant in their respective discussions of vulnerability. Leviathan uses this image to discuss original dominion, or natural maternal right over the child, while for Butler rights discourse produces fantasies of invulnerability that derealize other lives. However, Hobbes’s infant in nature has no rights and can only consent to being nourished. Only when able to nourish itself can it claim rights to transfer through the covenant producing a fan…Read more
-
1200Demos vs. Polis? Essays on Civic Responsibility and Participation (edited book)Kritika & Kontext. 2019.Does the polis face the demos with hostility? Do citizens contest the city? Is a people in opposed separation from its political institutions? A multidisciplinary collection on people and the institutions they find themselves in and under, the essays here engage questions of the individual , communities, leadership, populism, citizenship, social media, and technology. The collection includes work by philosophers, political scientists, and political theorists using quantitative, historical, and h…Read more
-
6981989 in Czechoslovakia through Arendt's Eyes: An Immodern RevolutionSociološki Pregled 3 (53): 787-811. 2019.This essay examines the status of events of 1989 in Czechoslovakia from an Arendtian perspective, focusing on whether they qualify as a revolution or even, precisely speaking, a modern event. For Arendt, revolutions are decidedly modern in that they expand freedom to all equally, an expansion conceivable because history can be thought of as rectilinear and because new ideas can be introduced into the secular world. Leaving aside the importance of violence as a criterion, we find that 1989 in Cz…Read more
-
685De Reconciliatione: Violence, the Flesh, and Primary VulnerabilityIn Dagmar Kusá (ed.), Identities in Flux: Globalization, Trauma, and Reconciliation. pp. 69-80. 2018.This essay compares Maurice Merleau-Ponty's notion of the flesh with Judith Butler's concept of primary vulnerability in terms of their helpfulness for developing an intersubjective ontology. It compares the flesh with Butler's more recent concept of primary vulnerability insofar as she sees both as useful for intersubjective ontology. The hiatus of the flesh is that which spans between self and world and opens Merleau-Ponty's thought onto an intersubjective ontology. While Butler's discussion o…Read more
-
876The Tensions between ‘Criminal’ and ‘Enemy’ as Categories for Globalized TerrorismInternational Journal of Applied Philosophy 1 (20): 107-126. 2006.This paper examines the tensions at play in three important documents involved in the ‘war on terror’: the “Application of Treaties” White House Legal Counsel Memo of 2001, the “National Security Strategy” document of 2002, and the 2004 Supreme Court decision Hamdi v. Rumsfeld. Reading these documents, it becomes clear that there is an overarching misunderstanding and confusion of the traditionally separate concepts of ‘criminal’ and ‘enemy’ in the struggle against globalized terrorism.
-
1022Thinking Descartes in Conjunction, with Merleau-Ponty: The Human Body, the Future, and HistoricityFilozofia 2 (74): 111-125. 2019.This article addresses a debate in Descartes scholarship over the mind-dependence or -independence of time by turning to Merleau-Ponty’s "Nature" and "The Visible and the Invisible." In doing so, it shows that both sides of the debate ignore that time for Descartes is a measure of duration in general. The consequences to remembering what time is are that the future is shown to be the invisible of an intertwining of past and future, and that historicity is the invisible of God.
-
116A Cartesian Rereading of Badiou’s Political SubjectivityPhilosophy Today 63 (1): 93-100. 2019.This article traces the consequences for Badiou’s political subjectivity if his understanding of the Cartesian subject is incorrect. For Badiou, the faithful subject, political and otherwise, is formed through fidelity to the appearance of an event of truth, and the process of this fidelity creates a world. These truths are immanent to the worlds in which they appear. An obscure subject, however, is faithful to a negation, while a reactive subject denies the appearance of a truth’s event. Badiou…Read more
-
114Jean-Luc Nancy, Ego Sum: Corpus, Anima, Fabula, translated by Marie-Eve MorinDerrida Today 12 (1): 106-112. 2019.This is a review of Marie-Eve Morin's translation of Jean-Luc Nancy's "Ego Sum."
-
69Fable, Method, and Imagination in DescartesPalgrave Macmillan. 2018.What role do fables play in Cartesian method and psychology? By looking at Descartes’ use of fables, James Griffith suggests there is a fabular logic that runs to the heart of Descartes’ philosophy. First focusing on The World and the Discourse on Method, this volume shows that by writing in fable form, Descartes allowed his readers to break from Scholastic methods of philosophizing. With this fable-structure or -logic in mind, the book reexamines the relationship between analysis, synthesis, an…Read more
-
161Richard F. Hassing, Cartesian Psychophysics and the Whole Nature of Man: On Descartes’s Passions of the Soul (review)Philosophy Today 60 (4): 989-991. 2016.This is a review of a book by Richard F. Hassing.
-
40DescartesIn Marie-Eve Morin & Peter Gratton (eds.), The Nancy Dictionary, Edinburgh University Press. 2015.This is an entry on Jean-Luc Nancy's understanding of certain important Cartesian concepts, such as the cogito.
-
132Mortal Gods: Science, Politics, and the Humanist Ambitions of Thomas Hobbes (review)Bulletin Hobbes, Archives de Philosophie 25 354-355. 2013.This is a review of a book by Ted H. Miller.
-
93The Hardwick Library and Hobbes’s Early Intellectual Development (review)Bulletin Hobbes, Archives de Philosophie 27 376-377. 2015.This is a review of a book edited by Richard Talaska.
Ankara, Ankara, Turkey
Areas of Specialization
| 20th Century Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |
| European Philosophy |